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 News from our Founder and Spiritual Father, John Michael Talbot

jmt in concert 

Photo courtesy of Hunter Darrouzet Photography, Dallas TX

Lent & Ash Wednesday 2010

We begin the liturgical season of Lent with Ash Wednesday. The ashes are made from burning the palm leaves from the previous Palm/Passion Sunday. The symbolism is rich.

We all too often fall away from our initial enthusiasm for Jesus, and crucify him afresh when we return to nonspiritual and godless mentalities and actions of life. We might still go to church and call ourselves Christians or believers and such, but inside our mode of operation remains nonspiritual, materialistic, and self absorbed.

Lent is the season to "do penance," and "repent." Penance and repentance simply mean to turn around. We turn back to God and true spirituality based on a self diffusive and self emptying love of God, humanity, and all creation. (Phil 2)

To be acceptable repentance must be "contrite." We must have a "humble and contrite heart." (PS 51) Repentance can be because of "attrition," or "contrition."

Attrition means that we turn around because it just makes good sense. God is the author of life, and those who really want to live life fully must turn to Him in order to do it right. While this is a good beginning, it is not enough. It can still be self focused.

Contrition means that we turn back to God out of love. Love is by its nature self emptying, and totally focused on anther's good. Ironically, it is then that we ourselves are most fulfilled. As Jesus says, we must lose ourselves for Him and others in order to find ourselves. We must die in order to really live.

Contrition involves love. It also involves a real living relationship. So when we stray from love we return with healthy sorrow for turning away in the first place. This is not an unhealthy sorrow that cripples us in fear. It is a healthy sorrow that unlocks healthy emotions and real heartfelt love. It causes us to come fully alive where once we may have allowed our hearts to turn to stone. It also renews and makes right our relationships with God and others again.

Lent also involves some external disciplines. We may fast, or do works of mercy for those in need, or pray more than usual. This is not about religious calisthenics. It is just about working on areas that might need a bit more attention so that we can do them better throughout the year. It also shows our love for God and people in a special way.

The Rule of St. Benedict in the monastic tradition says that the life of the monk should be a perpetual Lent. We are to go the extra mile, as Jesus said, every day. But it also says that Lenten practices are also good for the monks. His one stipulation is that the monks should reveal their Lenten practices to the Abbot.

This is not about allowing someone else to run our life, or to give them undue power over us. This is done to avoid overdoing it in a religiously fanatical way, or in under doing it in a self indulgent way. It also keeps the monk from becoming self directed in an unhealthy way. As the saying goes, only a fool has oneself as a spiritual director! Self diagnosis is also a bad idea when we need medical care. It is always good to submit to obedience for the sake of humbly recognizing that an elder or spiritual father or mother can still help us on our spiritual journey. When done well, they help us to become more mature and spiritually discerning in our daily life.

So this year receive your ashes meaningfully, and "make a good Lent." Let's all of us acknowledge our shortcomings, and turn back to God and each other in deeply meaningful ways. Have a good and holy Lent this year!

John Michael Talbot


The Christmas Myth: Christmas 2009

Christmas is the celebration of the birth of Jesus. At every Christmas we retell the story of His birth into our world, and open ourselves to His birth into our life. It is the celebration of the Christmas Myth that speaks deeply to every human heart that takes the time to really listen.

One of the first books I read about Jesus was, “The Jesus Myth,” by Andrew Greeley. I saw it in a bookstore on a college campus, and picked it up because the name of Jesus was so prominent in the title. As someone who ultimately converted to Roman Catholicism it now strikes me as ironic that a Catholic priest wrote it.

Some of us think that a “myth” is a story that is untrue, or a mere fantasy. But that is not really correct. A myth is a usually story that tells and symbolizes a deep and profound truth. But it often is, and can be rooted in a true story.

That is what Christians believe about Jesus. Jesus IS the sacred Story of stories, the Word of words. For us He is the Myth of myths, and the Truth of truths.

What is so special about the Jesus myth? We believe that in Jesus divinity assumed humanity so that we might share in divinity again. We also believe that death is conquered through His dying, and confirmed in His rising. In Jesus God is found in humanity, the Word in silence, glory in humility. These are paradoxes beyond mere human logic that speak a deeper truth that every human heart longs for. The fullness of the human yearning is complemented and completed in Him in a way that is most perfect. Jesus is the fullness of the Mystery of mysteries and the Paradox of all the paradoxes spoken of in the mystical traditions of all the great religions of the world. He is practical human balance and divine mystery all in one life, in one divine action. He is the Perfect Word in a way beyond words. This is the Mystery of Jesus.

All other religious founders and prophets are good in their own way. But no other fulfilled this human longing as completely as did Jesus. As a student of religion I study their teachings and admire them, but no other gives us such a complete Myth as Jesus does. Krishna died in a petty clan war after his great teachings to Arjuna recorded in the Bhagavad-Gita. The Buddha died after his great enlightenment and preaching ministry by eating some bad food. Lao Tzu wandered off into defeated obscurity, and Confucius died in what he thought was complete failure. Moses and all the prophets died after very human, and often flawed lives of otherwise righteous service of God and his people. Mohammad was reportedly transported to Allah after fulfilling his role as prophet for the Arab people, but was also a flawed human being. All of these were most commendable and holy, but none of them fulfilled the human need for a Savior as completely as did Jesus. He is the great Myth of salvation in a way unlike any other.

This is also true of the Christmas story. We know that Jesus was not actually born on December 25th, and that many of the details of the Christmas story developed over time. He was probably born in the Spring, and the date around the Winter Solstice was chosen much later as a symbolic time when the darkness of shortening days begins to retreat into longer days of greater light. Jesus was not born in a stable as we think of a stable, but in the privacy of a cave either below the crowed and very public upstairs Inn, or in a shepherd’s cave. The wise men did not come on Christmas night, but probably several years later as they traveled a great distance from the East after pondering star charts that spoke of a birth of a great king in Judah. These specific things are not mentioned in scripture in the way the Christmas myth often celebrates them. But that does not mean that the story is not true, and the Myth is not valid. Something did happen. Jesus was born. The Christmas myth tells that story.

The Christmas story is a great chapter in the greater Jesus myth. Something uniquely good and wonderful is evoked deep in human hearts when they even remotely understand the story of the birth of Jesus. This is true of believers and unbelievers alike. The idea that God takes on the flesh of humanity rather than humanity forcing its godlike power over everyone and everything else in creation, that glory is found in humility rather than arrogance and pride, strength in vulnerability rather than worldly power, the word in silence rather than in the constant noise of the modern world, that receiving is found in giving rather than consuming, and so on. The list goes on and on. These all speak very deeply to an inner longing of the human heart; the longing that love can overcome hatred, goodness can overcome evil, kindness can overcome cruelty, and gentleness can overcome brutality. Every human being is created to seek these wonderful truths.

These longings are satisfied at Christmas because they are satisfied in Jesus. Even a nominal Christmas points to these things. At Christmas we celebrate his birth. At Christmas we celebrate the truth that these things can be realized in every human heart that opens itself to them. We retell the great Myth of myths. The family gatherings, the carols, the giving of gifts, and the far off and deep feeling that all can be right in this world, are all part of this Myth. It is a time of great joy, and of some melancholy as we ponder these things deeply. It is a time for holy laughter and healing tears.

This Christmas open yourself to these mysteries and realize them in your life. Laugh a little, and cry a little. Let your heart be warmed. This Christmas open yourself to story of the birth of Jesus, and let your life become a story of love as well. Let Jesus be born into your life this Christmas. This is the real meaning of the Christmas myth.

November 9, 2009

Sacramental Altar Call

Many people say that Catholics do not have altar calls. But it really isn't true. At every Mass we have an opportunity to give our life fully to Jesus.

The Eucharist is the greatest ongoing public sacramental altar call. The Sacrament of Penance is ongoing, but it is done individually in private, though we are absolved os sin in the name of Jesus and the Church. The Mass is done as a gathered community in public. When we go forward to receive Jesus in the Eucharist we do so publicly in front of the entire community of faith.

At every Mass we have the opportunity to stand up, file into the aisles, and come forward for Jesus. When done rightly we publicly come forward with faith to give our life to Jesus in a love response to His giving His life fully for us. It is an act of love, faith, and gratitude. It is deeply personal, and it is also public.

For the Catholic this can be as real as coming forward to an evangelical altar call at a Billy Graham Crusade. But in a way it is much more.

It is done within the context of a community of faith that will keep us honest. It is easy to say that we have given our life to Jesus in a crowd so large that it remains rather anonymous. Within a local faith community we see these folks week in and week out. They can see through a religious fraud pretty quickly! If we have really given our life to Christ we will not be perfect (thus the need for the Sacrament of Penance!), but we will begin to really change or life through His grace so that we become more like Jesus in daily life one day at a time.

Also, with the Sacrament we respond to Jesus who is present in a way much greater than the quality of the music, the preaching, or the warmth of the local community. These things are all important, and ideally they are good in the local parish. But when one responds to Jesus at Mass it is in response to His real presence in the Eucharist in a way beyond the mere motivational quality of the local lay and clerical ministers. It is a divine gift.

Jesus is always present in the Eucharist regardless of our faith, or even the faith of the community. All that is needed is the Word of God proclaimed through a valid minister of the altar. His gift is ever present. Our faith may come or go, but His faith and presence remain forever, solid as a Rock. We can always find Him there if we simply approach Him with faith. He stands waiting for anyone who will come forward to give their life for Him.

Now if your last Communion was not such an experience for you, don't feel too guilty. We Catholics have enough of that already! But you can make a little promise to yourself that the next time you receive Jesus in the Eucharist it will be a time to give your life completely to He who first gave His life entirely for you. That is the real purpose of the Eucharist.

So don't let anyone tell you that Catholics don't have altar calls. We have one every day, and every Sunday at Mass! The problem is that we have not always approached the Mass with the right understanding or faith. So come forward, and give your life to Jesus Christ! He is always there, and He is waiting!

Peace and Good in Christ!

In Jesus,
John Michael Talbot
Founder, and Spiritual Father
The Brothers and Sisters of Charity at Little Portion Hermitage


Peace and Good in Christ!

Fr. Alan McCoy, OFM passed to the Lord yesterday, October 15, 2009 on the Feast of St. Theresa of Avila in Los Angeles, CA, after a long battle with strokes and a fall that eventually took his life. He was 96. I consider Fr. Alan one of my greatest personal teachers about following Jesus in the Church today. I will miss him more than words can express.

He was a leader in the Order of Friars Minor and the Franciscan family, and a great servant and visionary of the Church, and a champion of the poorest of the poor throughout Central America and whenever terrible poverty and abuse of basic human rights were found. He was most active in the battle for the rights of migrant workers in California with Caesar Chavez in the early days, and was with Bishop Oscar Romero the day he was martyred in El Salvador. He was a great human being, and servant of Jesus Christ and the Church.

He was also one of our first Visitators who formally monitor us annually in the name of the Church, and was really the one who helped the Brothers and Sisters of Charity to get firmly established canonically in the Diocese of Little Rock as a Public Association of the Faithful. He was a visionary, but practical enough to get things done in the Church. We simply could not have done this without him, so we are forever grateful for his love for us, and will always remember him as a key person in the establishment of The Brothers and Sisters of Charity.

But it is really not that alone that I will remember about him. We made many trips to Rome and Nicaragua together. I learned so much about him as a man during those trips. I watched him faithfully pray his Divine Office, silently moving his lips on planes, buses, and cars. This taught me about faithfulness to pray in any ministry in community and the Church. I watched him in dogged perseverance as we waited to see cardinals and bishops to share about our community. He was sometimes amused at the protocol designed to test one's resolve, but he never once got frustrated or angry. He was always at great peace and filled with deep joy. He shared with me that he always remembered that even the most pompous prelate gave their life to Jesus Christ and the Church just like he did, so he could never think of them as anything other than brothers in the Lord. He always loved them. In this he was a true son of St. Francis.

I know that many who were under his leadership as Provincial of the Santa Barbara Province of the Order of Friars Minor thought he was too tough. Others thought that he was too liberal. That probably means that in most things he was just right. I know that by the time he ministered to our community he most certainly was. There are many we meet in life who we call saintly. But I believe that Fr. Alan was a saint. There is a difference, and it is a good one.

Thank you dearest teacher and friend, Fr. Alan for all that you have done for The Brothers and Sisters of Charity. Thanks especially for what you have done for me personally, and for the personal lives of so many others in our community, the Church, and throughout the world. Your struggles are over. For this we rejoice with you in Jesus. But here on earth you will be sorely missed. For this I mourn with some selfish sadness. But if we have learned your lessons well, we know that this will soon enough pass into pure joy in Christ.

A message from our Founder on the Feast of the Portiuncula 8/2/09 


 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5wI1uN4vMw

Ordinary Time 2009

After Pentecost we move back into Ordinary Time. This is fitting.

After the great ups and downs of Lent, Holy Week, The Triduum, Ascension, and Pentecost, we need to apply these great spiritual realities to every day life. We are called to discipline our western hedonism daily through simple living, chastity, and obedience. We face emotional trials associated with the ups and downs of daily life, or the suffering and the loss of loved ones frequently in life, especially as we get older.  We experience the joy of seeing the resurrections of life when good things come after seemingly hopeless periods. We have our faith in the divine gift of God in our life confirmed through the various “ascensions” of seeing things that come from God return to Him in glory. Lastly, we experience the gift of the power and gentleness of the Holy Spirit, the inspirations and the respirations of the Breath of God, as our spirits are born again in Christ. Most importantly, we are called to daily let go of the old self of ego attachments and pride so that a completely new spiritual way of being is humbly born again. All of this happens to us day in, and day out.

Most of these spiritual realities come through the most ordinary events of life. They are usually nothing special. But they are important.

At the monastery we say that one must learn how to “grow a green bean for God” before we make any real spiritual progress. We must learn to find God in the soil of the earth if we are to really find Him in heaven. We must find Him in ordinary people before we can really find him in the extraordinary things of the Spirit. If we cannot get along with coworkers or work heads, the chances are that we really do not yet know Jesus. We may know about Jesus, but we do not yet really know Jesus.

The Zen masters once taught on this. A young aspirant came to a great master and asked how to be “enlightened.” The master only said, “Chop wood, carry water.” No other words were spoken.  Enlightenment will not usually come to those who are still seeking the “bliss” of spiritual awakening. It comes to us through the most ordinary events of daily life.

There is a similar story about St. Francis. A young novice wanted to go “preach” with the great holy man. After waiting many months St. Francis finally invited him to accompany him to “preach.” They went into town where Francis proceeded to visit casually with the shop owners and people in the streets of Assisi. After several hours of this Francis said to the novice, “Let’s go home.” The novice was stunned. Didn’t they go out to preach? Why didn’t Francis preach gloriously as he had seen him do so many times before? Francis replied that they had been preaching all along. Perhaps the young novice was really seeking glory, and not the real service of preaching? He only wanted the extraordinary, but could not yet find the extraordinary in the ordinary things of life.

Jesus and the Wisdom literature of the Old Testament clearly say that unless we are faithful in the little things of life, we will not be given the great.  Like St. Francis, we must be happy to rebuild the little church of San Damiano stone by stone before we are ready to really bring renewal and reform to the entire Church.

We must learn to enter fully into the Paradox and Mystery of Jesus where apparent contradictions speak of a deeper spiritual Truth. Here we find real spiritual life in dying to the old self, wealth in gospel poverty and simplicity, communion in holy solitude, and communication through sacred silence. Regarding our topic, we find the extraordinary things of God in the ordinary things of daily life. We find the divine in the human, and the things of heaven even while here on earth.

As we enter back into Ordinary Time I ask you to please embrace these realities. Do not resist them.  If we do not resist we will find Divine Reality. If we resist we will be resisting Jesus, and we will be filled with anxiety that will lead to anger, depression, and despair. The way to peace is in “letting go, and letting God.” Let God touch you with His extraordinary gifts in the midst of the ordinary things of life. Then you will always be free to experience the little or the great without becoming attached to either.  Then you will know the freedom of Jesus Christ.

Peace and Good in Christ!

Happy Pentecost! It is the birthday of the Church, so I can also say, "Happy Birthday!"

There are two scriptures that we can look at today: The first is the "mighty rushing wind" of God of Acts 2. The second is the gentle life giving breath of God of The Gospel of John. The first is witnessed at Pentecost with the wind of the Spirit, and the tongues of fire. The second is seen when Jesus breathed the Spirit upon the disciples.

The disciples had witnessed Jesus' life, teachings, and miracles. They had seen Him be true to those teachings to the point of death, death on a cross. They had experienced the unspeakable joy and wonder of seeing Him rise from the dead in the resurrection, and had had their faith that He came from God confirmed by seeing Him go back to God in the Ascension.

You would think that would have been enough to inspire them for the rest of their lives. But it wasn't. Jesus told them not to leave Jerusalem until they were clothed with the Power from on High, the power of the Holy Spirit. That happened at Pentecost.

There are some interesting words that are related. The first is, "inspiration." The second is, "respiration." Inspiration means to be in the spirit of another. When we are inspired by God we are in the Spirit of God. We are in the Spirit, and the Spirit is in us. The second word is, "respiration." It means to breathe in the Spirit, for the Spirit is the breath of God that gave the human being life. Without it we cannot live. We must breathe in order to remain alive. We must "respirate."

These two words bring out two aspects of life in the Spirit.  The first brings out the powerful work of the Spirit as witnessed in the great spiritual gifts like tongues, prophesy, healing, teaching and others. These are very discernible signs that accompany the disciples of Jesus. They are "demonstrative" because they can be clearly seen and perceived by others. The second is more gentle, contemplative, and hidden. It is in the realms of the Mystery of Jesus. It is "mystical." The first is definable, and perceptible by the mind, emotions, and the senses of soul and body. The second is beyond all images, names, and forms. It can only be intuited by the spirit.

The Hesychasts of Eastern Orthodox Christianity divided things into "energy," and "essence" to help them understand these things. Such theological and metaphysical definitions are incomplete, but they at least help us to understand how such things work. They would say that all things have energies that are demonstrative and "knowable." They also have an essence that can only be perceived by intuitions beyond all definitions of name, form, or idea. Both are real, and are really part of the thing considered. But one exists in the realm of objective truth, and the other in the realm of mystery. This is partly because of our limited capacity to understand anything fully. We are only human. Part of it is because this is really how things must be understood in order to understand them fully.

If this is true with created things, how much more with God! Creation is limited. God is infinite. So, God has energy and essence as well. God's energies are "uncreated energies," since God is uncreated. His energies are the things that are perceptible through body and soul, through senses, emotions, and thoughts. His essence can only be understood in the spirit. His energies are given to us through His gifts of the Spirit. His essence is given to us through contemplation, Spirit to spirit. Essence is the deepest part of God that can only be known through "unknowing." One is part of God's "immanence." the other is part of his "transcendence." His immanence is known through the Incarnation of the Word in Jesus. His transcendence can only be known through intuition in the Spirit.

"Inspiration" is known and stirred up through enthusiastic participation in the Christian life, especially enthusiastic worship. This is especially seen in the Charismatic renewal and other renewal movements in the Church. "Respiration" is known through the more quiet and contemplative prayer methods of Christian tradition. These include Lectio, or slow meditative reading that passes over into contemplation beyond all words in the West, and the Jesus Prayer in the East. The use of slowing the breath while sitting in a still and stable posture is used in both today.

This Pentecost is filled with both aspects of God's Spirit. Let's open ourselves to the great spiritual gifts spoken of in scripture. Some of these are demonstrative for the building up of the Church through ministries of various kinds. These are filled with human and divine energy and enthusiasm. Some are quiet contemplative gifts that are quite personal and hidden. They are mystical. They communicate his deepest Mystery. Opening ourselves to this width and breadth of the Spirit makes us bigger people, and better Christians.

We desperately need big Christians today. The bigness of our world seems all the more accessible in modern times through technologies like the internet. Therefore, our world seems to be getting bigger and smaller. This makes both the wonder and the tragedy of the world all the more immediate to us in daily life. So the world still needs the Good News, the Gospel of Jesus. It is only in the power of the Spirit that we can accomplish this task. This is the Great Commission that Jesus gave us, and the main scriptural reason the Spirit was given to us at Pentecost. So let us open ourselves to the full gift of the Spirit, know the good news of Jesus personally, and bring the good news to the world!

Lastly, Pentecost is a liturgical celebration on a particular day at the close of the Easter season. But Pentecost should be every day! Liturgical celebrations are supposed to encourage and remind us of a particular aspect of the life of Christ and the Church that can be part of our life every day. Every day is Pentecost. Every day is Easter, Good Friday, and Christmas. Our life is to be abundant and full in Christ.

Have a great Pentecost!

In Jesus,

John Michael Talbot
Founder, and Spiritual Father
The Brothers and Sisters of Charity at Little Portion Hermitage


Many have asked that we establish a Fr. Bob Dombrowski Charity Chapel Rebuilding Fund. Fr. Bob was very active in the planning of the new  chapel, and much was designed to his specifications, and with him in  mind. In a very real sense it will not only be the monastic community's chapel, but Fr. Bob's as well.

Please help us honor this wonderful priest by making a generous donation to a cause he prayed for daily at Mass. We expect that, united fully with Jesus, he will  help bring this project to completion!

COUNT ME IN!  
$25.00 donation    
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$100.00 donation    
$500.00 donation    
 
 

An Easter Manifesto 2009: Rebuilding a Good Foundation

Holy Week and Easter are the most important celebrations in the Liturgical Year, more so than Christmas, or any of the other Solemnities, important as they are.  Holy Week is the most important week of the year. The Triduum of Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Easter Vigil are the most important. And the Easter Vigil is the most important out of the three. The Easter Vigil is the summit of the Liturgical Year because it celebrates the joyous resurrection of Jesus from the dead after His death on the Cross. It is the ultimate proof that the way, the truth, and the life of death to the old self in order to find a whole new self in Christ is indeed, victorious over any obstacle we face in this world. This is an interesting Easter at Little Portion Hermitage. While still joyful, our services are cut back from the usual extraordinary dressings and celebrations to a standard Catholic Holy Week. Nothing wrong with that! But it will be subdued from our normal celebrations. This is because we have no big Chapel or Common building. Space limitations demand that we celebrate small.

We also have the constant reminder of the new chapel and common center building project going on at the smack dab center of the Hermitage. While coming along, they have hit much more rock than anticipated, so the below-the-ground work is taking a longer time than expected. But it is most important. They are removing tons of rock, and carefully preparing the footings, foundation, and below the ground complex of electric and plumbing. For a building this size that is no small thing.

This has much to teach us at the Hermitage this year. It also has much to teach our Domestics and friends as we face the tough economy and environment this year. As Jesus says, we are called to build our house on rock and not on sand.This time of trouble can either be a time of discouragement, or a time of opportunity. Because of my belief in the resurrection power of Jesus I choose the latter. We are all called to deepen our spiritual roots in the dying and rising of Jesus Christ by dying to our old self, and rising up a new person in Christ. This includes all that we are, body and soul, so that our spirit might be born again in the Spirit of Jesus. This is radically exemplified in Jesus' journey through Holy Week, and in His dying and rising in a special way. We realize this through daily common and private prayer, meditation, and the gift of contemplation. The Eucharist, when rightly celebrated, is the most powerful way to experience this in common. I would also like to outlay a sweeping view of some of the basic systematic social troubles that face us today. By the nature of this "sweep" I will overly generalize and inevitably leave some things out. Some will even be important. But I will at least give it a try.  I apologize in advance. But maybe this will get some of us thinking more radically? This is a time for radical rethinking and change.

I will be restating some things that are more completely laid out in my book, "Simplicity." It will also resonate with those involved in the Catholic Land, and Catholic Homestead movements.

Don't get me wrong. I am a child of the modern west, and enjoy her many benefits. I like our comfortable living just like everyone else. But I also think that we have allowed ourselves to grow into a seriously unhealthy society that needs to radically change if we are to survive. Simple Living
1) Based on the community in Acts 2 and 4 we renew our call to simple living. We differentiate between our wants and out needs, because habitually indulging our wants kills the needy. I believe that during Easter this year we are being called to really work on the foundations of our faith and way of life again. We are being called to "get back to basics." We are being called to really simplify.  We are all learning to let go of many of things that we thought we needed, but only wanted. We are also learning how to do without some of our needs. We are learning that we can still live happy lives when we really look to the spiritual as the priority in our life. Through the years we have also supported relief and development, and missionary work in the developing world.  We have done this through the work of Mercy Corps, and our own Our Lady of the Angels Mission in Nicaragua. Catholic relief is also an excellent relief and development agency that is fully Catholic. 

Economics

2) Based on Jesus' call to renounce all possessions, and St. Francis' renunciation of money, we renew our call to avoid becoming addicted to an economy that is based less on real value, and more on the accumulation of mere digits on a computer screen, or money that is not worth the paper it is printed on. We learn how to barter justly with one another within our community. We learn how to trust in God for our future needs. Our economy is on just about everyone's mind nowadays. We are in the modern equivalent of the Great Depression of our parent's time. Ironically, the depression they swore they would never let happen again has occurred. The physical limitations and poverty our parents swore would never affect their children is happening to millions of us. Yet we hear of billions and even trillions of dollars in bailouts, deficits, and national debts. It all seems a bit mind boggling to most of us. But there are some things we can understand. Of course, simple living just makes good sense. When we simplify, we need less. When we need less, we don't need to spend as much. This economic time of trouble is an ideal time to cut back to basics, and learn to really be happy with them. After all, this is the normal lot of the vast majority of the population of planet earth. Why should think ourselves "too good" for it? Plus, our entire economic system is based on an illusion. Once upon a time money actually represented tangible material goods that were worth something. Precious metals like silver and gold were the bedrock of our monetary system for many years. Real estate is also really worth something. Before the time of St. Francis most people bartered, and augmented a transaction with money. During the time of St. Francis people began to use money as the primary means of trade. Coupled with the new mobility of the population along safer trade routes, and the growth of democracy to replace Feudalism, this revolutionized Europe and much of the world. It allowed the poor to rise up from their previously fixed lower classes and to make something of themselves. The Church was supportive since it helped the poor to obtain a better standard of living.

But Francis was skeptical. He saw that the revolution did not address the deeper issue of spiritual prosperity. So, he would not allow his brothers to even touch the very money that promised to liberate the poor.  He showed the entire world that one could still work in bartered exchange for food, clothing, and shelter. His simpler way of life was the deeper answer that brought a spiritual soul back to the socio/economic and political revolution of the western world.

Today we use money exclusively for trade. But today money has largely become only digits on a computer screen, and is sometimes printed at will out of nothing.  I once had a doctor of economics tell me that modern money only represents the optimism or pessimism of a people. He said that there was no longer any real material worth except the paper it was printed on.  Think of it: We toil and work all our live to accumulate money. But in the end it isn't worth the paper it is printed on! 
Demographics and Environment
3) Based on the divine ordination of humanity to "till the garden" in Genesis, we are called back to the knowledge of how to produce the basics of life on planet earth; food, clothing, and shelter. We are called back to our agrarian roots as a community, a nation, and as a human species. This occurs in our Little Portion Farm and Free Range Chicken outreach. This also has environmental ramifications. From the time of Genesis until recently humanity was primarily agrarian. We were farmers. We also hunted. For most of history that has remained the case, but in the last one hundred years we have radically changed that demographic.  Before World War I twenty-four out of twenty-five families in lived on the farm. The average farm was small, around 100 or so acres. The family worked the farm together, and they grew a variety of crops and animals that allowed them to be largely self-sufficient. Cities were the place where specialized goods and needs were supplied for the populations in general. After WWII the figure reversed. Twenty-four out of every twenty-five families moved into the growing cities. In 1983 forty-nine out of fifty families lived in the city. Today they say that as many as 97 out of every 100 families is living in the city or the suburbs. This means that the small minority is growing food for the vast majority. And this percentage is growing. One farm family now has to cultivate thousands of acres left vacant by the families who moved to the cities. In order for them to farm the thousands of acres they are almost forced to use artificial fertilizers and pesticides that are ultimately harmful to the soil they depend on, and the food they produce. Poultry growers have to use antibiotics and such to keep animals alive, who live their short and miserable lives in an artificial and cruel environment. Most farmers readily admit that this is a most unhealthy and harmful way to take care of the earth and our animals. But the demographic shift away from the farm has forced the farmers themselves into it. This also means that we have to go thousands of miles to dinner every day. When the farms run by a single family have to grow thousands of acres, they tend to specialize on one main crop.  To get a variety of food to us it has to be shipped hundreds and thousands of miles, and sometimes across entire oceans. This necessitates their being processed and artificially preserved to survive the time it takes to get it long to our local market.  Artificially processed food has advantages under that system. But the better answer is to change the system itself to something more natural and in keeping with God's original plan for humanity and creation.
The City
4) Based on Plato and Thomas Aquinas in the west, we are called back to cities where the basics of food, clothing, and shelter are produced from its own local area, and those in the cities produce the specialty products really needed. This also reduces the need for agribusiness and foods overly processed in order to transport them to market, and to prolong shelf life. It also warns us about our impersonal suburbs created by the high mobility of the automobile, and calls us back to a true neighborhood of personal relationships. This is found in the monastery as a village based on God for those of all states of life. Plato and even St. Thomas Aquinas said that the majority of the population should be those who produce the basic food we need to live. They are rural farmers. The reason is simple: If we do not eat, we die. The city should have most of its needs produced locally from the farms in its immediate vicinity. Trade with other cities and towns is necessary, but should be kept to a minimum. Cities should be largely self-sufficient from the land around it. The result was to be a healthy and colorfully rich environment for everyone on the city and on the farm. Today cities are a polluted grey sprawl of factories, warehouses, urban and suburban houses, and cookie cutter strip malls. Most of us produce a specialized service that we really don't need. Then we have to convince everyone else that we all NEED this specialized product. A friend of mine said that his city was a population of restaurant owners where everyone goes to another restaurant for dinner every night. Somehow this seems rather inane. The Suburbs One of the greatest contributors to this overall breakdown is the growth of the suburbs.  Sociologists often say that the sprawling suburbs grew because of the rise of the automobile. Where once city dwellers lived close to where they worked, and walked or rode public transportation to their job every day, now we live miles from our work, and ride isolated with our windows up in air conditioned cars on cobwebbed freeways every day. Where once we knew our neighbors because we rubbed shoulders with them on a daily basis, now we live next door to folks we rarely see "up close and personal." The suburb has lost all sense of real community as we go from house to car and car to house without ever really touching the lives of those who live all around us. Our dependency on the automobile has isolated us in our suburban houses, and has greatly contributed to the pollution of the environment that some say is irreversible.

Personal and Family Matters

5) We renew our call to households that work their own farm or business, so that they can be closer to each other on a daily basis, and where mutual responsibility is fostered through shared work and a stake in the family business. This is done at the Hermitage through our mutual work for the common good, and in the entire family sharing the responsibility for the community. This also has some immediate personal ramifications.  Isn't a life free of the physical toil of the farm advantageous? Physically, it is less work. (I must admit that I am a lazy musician at heart!) But in some most important ways it is harmful. Without natural physical labor our bodies grow flabby and fat. Then we become sick and emotionally out of balance. Then the thoughts themselves are clouded by an out of balance way of life. This can have a negative effect on spirituality. A healthy body and mind pave the way to a healthy spirit.  Also, when most families do their work on the home farm, they are able to be close to their families when they work. This is most important for a sense of stability with the children. Plus, all the family members share in the work of the small farm. This means that children gain a sense of ownership for something that will be passed on to them when they become adults. This has huge positive effects on the fabric of the family, which is the building block of society in general.
War and Peace
6) We renew our call to get to the causes of conflict and war from the unequal distribution of the world's resources through greed, and to willingly embrace a simple lifestyle. The demographic shift from the farm to the city has also resulted in the risk of a top-heavy society where most the population produces specialty products, and only a few know how to produce environmentally friendly food, clothing, and shelter.  We do this through our common life and agrarian base at the Hermitage. We also try to uproot any violence in our heart, even towards our enemies. The problem with our system is that it is highly vulnerable. When a society moves away from producing its own basic needs, it is in danger. Like a football player who is more vulnerable when their center of gravity is too high, so a society that economically moves away from producing its own basic needs is at risk of being toppled. One of the contributing factors in the fall of the Roman Empire was the rise of its slaves when they realized that the average Roman citizen could no longer produce their own basic needs. It was not long before the slaves rose up in revolt. We are in a similar situation in relation to the rest of the world. We also consume most of the world's resources to live our out of balance way of life. Most of the world is poor by our standards, and are subsistence farmers. But they could use more. The few consume most of the world's resources, while the many use the little.  St. Augustine said that what we use that we do not need we steal from the poor. When the few have the much and the many have the little, the many will ultimately rise up in revolt against the few. Usually the revolt will be bloody. If we want to avoid war, and avoid risk of our own overthrow by the many of this world, we will seriously amend the basics of our current social system and demographics.
Health Care

7) Based on the Divine Physician we renew our call to health care that is available to all, and integrates the best of the west and the east in providing remedies and cures. We do this through the use of western and alternative medicine available through local physicians, clinics, and state heath care. Here at Little Portion we operate the Little Flower Clinic.


Time For Action

Our modern society is growing bankrupt. Our economy no longer works because the fabric of our society no longer works. We tend to be personally unfulfilled. Most of us are sick in body, soul, and spirit. Our environment is in serious trouble. Our industrial and technologically based lifestyle is a huge contributor to this imbalance. Imbalance causes more imbalance. There is an increase in war around the world, and we are directly or indirectly involved in many of them. Unless we do something to stop it, and do it soon, we are on a merry go round to self destruction.

Am I saying that all industry or technology is bad? Am I saying that the city is bad? Absolutely not! These are all good if used well, and in a balanced and healthy way. But I am saying that we have allowed the basics of our society to become imbalanced. This imbalance leads to all kinds of trouble.  It leads to sickness of body, soul, and spirit. When sickness is left untreated it can lead to life long disabilities, and even death.

What We Can Do What do we do? That's a tough one. Most of us are so entrenched in our system that we cannot get free. Some would say that all that will really free us is an ultimate fall of our whole way of life. Maybe so, but I certainly hope not. Most of can begin by simplifying our life. Do we need it, or just want it? This is a radical question if we ask it of ourselves seriously. Differentiating between wants and needs is enough to radically revolutionize our way of life. When we do that, then we will greatly appreciate and enjoy the little "wants" that God and others give us out of love. We can also begin to grow a family garden. Some will start in their own backyard. Some will move to a house with an acre or so close to the city where they work. Some will move to small farms. Some might even join a community like The Brothers and Sisters of Charity who are committed to simple and natural living. Natural organic vegetables are much more healthy, and taste much better than the ones we find in supermarkets. Where possible we can raise some free-range chickens for eggs, and even meat. You will be surprised by the difference in taste and nutrition! We can also save energy. Make your home energy efficient when the time for repairs and replacements comes around. Turn down your heat and air conditioning. Check out alternative energy for your home. Eat less, and eat smart.  Eat natural and organic when you can. Drive a hybrid car next time you buy. Drive less, and use public transportation. Or ride a bike and walk. Use western and eastern medicine. Western medicine is often much more expensive, but eastern treatments are sometimes not covered by western insurance companies Also, get the family involved. You would be surprised how much it builds family relationships to work together on a basic project like this. Yes, there will be initial complaints, and even some ongoing ones. But don't let that stop you if you are serious about it. The benefits far outweigh the sacrifices. Regarding war; Root out any violence within your heart towards any others, even your enemies. This is the teaching of Jesus. No war can be just if such violence lives in the human heart, and all war can be stopped if it is replaced with a truly peaceful heart, mind, and spirit. This is done through communal and private meditation and prayer. One by one, person by person, such inner peace can put an end to war, in this world or the next. Without it even the next world will be one of conflict and strife. Conclusion

So this Holy Week and Easter do not let the bad news of the economy, the environment, and wars get you down. Take courage from the resurrection of Jesus and do something about it! Start small. But by taking one step at a time we can travel great distances in time.  We can accomplish great changes for the better if we simply begin and work together. Be filled with the message of Easter hope!

This time of trouble can become a great opportunity to make some foundational changes in our entire way of life as individuals, families, and as a nation. It is radical, but it is not fanatical, and it is doable. Maybe it can be the opportunity of a lifetime, or even the opportunity of a century to do something beautiful for God. Do not give up hope. Have faith. Love God, and His entire creation, beginning with all human beings, especially those of the household of the Faith. And let your faith, hope, and charity lead to good deeds that change the world for the better! This is the challenge and the assurance of the Easter message of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

In Jesus,

John Michael Talbot
Founder, and Spiritual Father
The Brothers and Sisters of Charity at Little Portion Hermitage

 


 

March 3, 2009 Lenten Message

Peace and Good in Christ! 

Another Lent is upon us. As I get older it seems the years go faster, and one liturgical season seemingly begins right after it ends! I often tell the monastic community that Advent is "Lent with a little sugar on top!" Well, there is no sugar coating on our efforts to greater conversion to Jesus this year. The gloves are off!!

We begin the season of Lent in earnest. We begin Lent on Ash Wednesday. On that holy day we are marked with the sign of the blessed cross with ashes. These ashes are made by burning the palms used on Palm/Passion Sunday from the previous year. This is rich with significance. 

The people welcomed Jesus in to Jerusalem with shouts of "Hosanna!" Hosanna means "save us now." A few days later they were calling out, "Crucify Him!" We also welcome Jesus enthusiastically when He meets our expectations of what we think Him to be, and what He ought to do. But this is still ego, though cloaked in religious clothes. So when He does something different, we often turn on Him, or abandon Him completely. We sin. The Letter to the Hebrews says that when we sin knowingly after we accept Jesus we "crucify Him anew." So, we are often much like those "religious" people who welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem at first, but ended up calling "Crucify Him" in the end.  

But we are not without hope. The accursed psalms of sin are burned and turned to ashes. This is a symbol of what happens when we really accept Jesus into our lives. The sins of the past, even as Christians, are burned up. They are wiped away. They are forgiven. This happens through the dying of Jesus on the cross and His rising from the tomb.  

When these palms are turned into ashes they are received on our foreheads in the sign of the Cross. We must die to our ego driven life, our past sins. We let go of self in the self emptying of Jesus so that we might become who God really created us to be. We find ourselves by losing ourselves in Him. 

The disciplines of Lent are just ways to help with that process. Patterned after the 40 days of fasting and prayer in desert by Jesus, we also embrace some tangible practices to help us become more like Jesus. Moderate fasting, silence and solitude for prayer, alms giving, and just learning to silence our ego and pride so that we might listen more readily to others and come to deeper love of God, are some suggestions from tradition.  

This Lent try starting off with a complete readiness to die to the old patterns of self, religious or secular, so that we might become the new person God wants us to be. Try embracing the disciplines of greater spirituality suggested by the Church, Each year we make steps forward. But we also fail at times. Jesus forgives all who sincerely come back to Him with humble and contrite hearts. The season of Lent is a great way to regain any lost ground on the spiritual journey. Have a blessed Lent as we prepare for a joyous Easter! 

In Jesus,  

John Michael Talbot
Founder and Spiritual Father
The Brothers and Sisters of Charity at Little Portion Hermitage


 

A message from our Founder and Spiritual Father, John Michael Talbot,
on the Feast of St. Anthony of the Desert


An open letter to President Barach Obama on Pro-Life

 http://www.johnmichaeltalbot.com/Reflections/index.asp?id=189