The Waters of Siloe

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The Waters of Siloe Page 42

by Thomas Merton


  resignation of, 132

  Purity of heart, xxviii

  Q

  Quietism, definition of, 366

  R

  Rancé, Armand Jean le Bouthillier de, xxiii f. 37–49, 97, 184, 300

  at Rome, 42

  becomes an abbot, 41

  books of, 45 f.

  conversion of, 39 ff.

  death of, 49

  illness of, 125–126

  nature of, 38 f.

  notions of sanctity and monastic life, 43 f., 303 ff.

  portrait of, 307

  repugnance for monks, 39

  retirement to La Trappe, 39

  Refectory, 275, 366

  Religious orders: apostolic functions of, xxxv f.

  suppression of, 50

  Revenge, spirit of, 333

  Rhode Island, Trappists in, 83, 100, 177–182, 262

  Richelieu, Cardinal, 33 f., 37

  Riedra, La, 185

  Robert, Father, 70

  Robert, St, 17

  Roche, Geoffrey de la, 272

  Rocourt, Dom Louis, 53

  Romuald, St, 8 f.

  Rosary, the, 308, 366

  Rule of St. Benedict, xxii, xxv, 20 f., 54, 104, 125, 150, 151, 154, 157 f., 183, 193, 280, 289, 291, 309, 340, 348

  Russia, Trappists in, 58 f.

  Ryan, Dom Bruno, 143

  S

  Sablière, Mme. de, 48

  Sacrifice, love and, xx

  Ste. Marie du Mont, 220

  St. Louis, settlement, 74

  St. Patrick’s Cathedral, 81

  St. Susan’s, Lulworth, 58

  St. Thierry, William of, xx, 347

  Salve Regina, 366

  Sanctity, attainment of, 194

  San Isidro, 218

  Santander, Cistercians in, 213 ff.

  Schumann, M, in monastery, 220

  Scotland, Cistercians in, 240

  Seasons, fundamental, 296

  Secular, definition of, 366

  Séez, Bishop of, 91

  Self-knowledge, 22

  Sept-Fons monastery, 192, 199, 219 f.

  Abbot of, 189

  Septuagesima, 296

  Séraphin, Father, 252, 256

  Sext, definition of, 366

  Shakers, 67, 114

  Silence in Trappist monasteries, xvi

  Sleep in Tranpist monasteries, xvi

  Smets, Dom Hermann-Joseph, 232, 351

  Smyth, Father Clement, 142

  Snuff., use of, 230–231

  Social consciousness, 17

  Social experimentation in America, 114 ff.

  Sortais, Dom Gabriel, 220, 307

  Soul of the Apostolate, The, xxiv

  South America, Trappists in, 189–190

  Spain: Cistercian houses in, 33

  Trappists in, 58

  Spalding, Monsignor Martin, 107

  Spanish Civil War, 210 ff.

  Catholic revival following, 218

  Spirit of God, 332

  Spirit of the world, 146–147, 332

  Spiritual Directory, xxvif, 25, 301, 316

  Stability, vow of, 126

  Stephen, Brother, 177

  Stephen, St, of Obazine, 20

  Story of a Soul, The, 103, 325

  Strict Observance, 33 f., 38, 41, 47, Order of Cistercians of the (see Trappists)

  Suicide, Cistercians and, 268, 269

  Sulpician fathers, 63, 106

  Swallows, Dom François and, 310–311

  Switzerland, Trappists in, 53 f.

  Syria, monasteries of, 4

  T

  Tabenna, monastery at, 4, 5

  Taillée, Baroness de la Roche, 150

  Tegelen, monastery of, 224 f.

  Theresa, St, of Avila, 272

  Therésè, St, of Lisieux, 203 ff., 325, 327 f.

  Third Order, Trappist, 60, 63, 102

  Thymadeuc, Brittany, 93, 100

  Trappe (see La Grande Trappe)

  Trappistine nuns, 90, 92 f., 96, 182 f., 271, 323

  at Igny, 200–201

  first, 184

  in Canada, 186 ff.

  in South America, 189

  during World War I, 200

  Trappists, 11

  and French Revolution, 50 ff.

  become Order in own right, 145

  dispersal of, 50 ff.

  division into two congregations, in charge of penitentiary, 171

  in China, 249 ff.

  in 1834, division of, 105

  life of monks, 116–118

  meaning of term, xxii

  meeting (1892) in Rome, 149 f.

  return to France, 80–82

  reunion into one order, xxiii ff.

  Talleyrand’s commission, report on, 51 f.

  training of monks, 152

  Val Sainte reform, 61, 93 ff., 103

  “Trappists of Monk’s Mound, The,” 61

  Tropics, Cistercian activity in, 190

  Truth, three degrees of, 22

  Tuscany, Cistercians in, 33

  U

  Umbratilem, Pope Pius XI’s, xxxi f.

  Usages, definition of, 366

  Utah, Cistercians in, 243 ff., 261

  Utopias, in America, 114–115

  V

  Vacandard, Father, 268

  Vaise, convent at, 185–187

  Vallombrosa, St. John of, 7

  Val Sainte, 53 if, 93 ff.

  timetable at, 302 f.

  Val Sainte reform, 61

  austerities of, 103

  in Nova Scotia, 93 ff.

  van der Meer de Walcheren, Pierre, 54

  Van Rysenberg, Baron Van Rykvorsel, 149

  Vargas, Martin, 33

  Venlo, bombardment of, 225

  Vespers: definition of, 366

  singing of, 9, 91, 282, 287

  Viaceli, monastery at, 211 ff.

  Vicente, Father, 212–213

  Victor, St, xxiii

  Villemer, Brother Candide, 329 ff.

  Vows, definition of, 367

  Vox del Cister, La, 218

  Vulgate, 297–298

  W

  Waldeck-Rousseau anti-Catholic legislation, 172, 182, 211

  Walsh, E. H, 164

  Watchmaking, 71, 73, 77 ff.

  Waters: of Siloe, xxix

  symbolism of, 272 f.

  Ways of Mental Prayer, The, xxv, 194, 328

  Weld, Thomas, 58

  Westmalle, Belgium, 101, 148

  White Cowl, The, 136, 165

  William of St. Thierry, xx, 347

  Women, religious communities of, 183 ff. (see also Trappistine nuns)

  World, spirit of the, 146–147, 332

  World War I, 195 ff.

  World War II, 219 ff..

  Wrentham, 182

  Wurzburg, Bavaria, seminary at, 157

  Wyart, Dom Sebastian, 159, 172

  X

  Xavier, Father Francis, 92 ff., 97

  Y

  Yang Kia Ping, monastery at, 249 ff.

  burning of, 258

  Communist attack on, 252 ff.

  lists of the dead, 260–261

  Yugoslavia, monasteries in, 261

  About the Author

  THOMAS MERTON (1915–1968) was born in France and came to live in the United States at the age of 24. He received several awards recognizing his contribution to religious study and contemplation, including the Pax Medal in 1963, and remained a devoted spiritualist and a tireless advocate for social justice until his death in 1968.

  Footnotes

  * After Chapter in the winter a very light breakfast (frustulum) may be taken by those who do not wish to fast until dinner.

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  † Compline begins with about ten minutes of public reading in the Chapter Room or Cloister.

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  1 John xvii:3.

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  2 William of St. Thierry, Epistola ad Fratres de Monte Dei, ii, No. 16. />
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  3 St. Thomas Aquinas, Sumana Theologica, II llae, q. 182, a. 2, ad 3.

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  4 (Paris, 1919); Holy Abandonment, English translation (Dublin, 1934).

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  5 Les Voies de l’Oraison Mentale (Paris, 1908); English translation (Dublin, 1938).

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  6 Le Directoire Spirituel des Cisterciens Reformes (Bricquebec, 1910), chap, vi, pp. 34–37. Cf. English translation by a Monk of New Melleray (Gethsemani, 1946), p. 34 ff.

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  7 Purity of heart, puritas cordis, is a technical term in medieval ascetical writing. It harks back to the beatitudes, “Blessed are the clean of heart, for they shall see God” (Matt. v:8). It means detachment not only from all illicit desires but even from licit pleasures and temporal interests and cares. More than that, it signifies the ability to rise above and beyond the images of created things and all dialectical reasoning in order to seize the truth by a pure and direct intuition.

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  8 Op. cit., p. 41.

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  9 Ecclus. xv:3.

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  10 Isa. viii:6.

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  1 “We must say that the Apostolic life tends principally to contemplation which fructifies in the apostolate.” (Garrigou-Lagrange, The Three Ages of the Interior Life, St. Louis, 1948, Vol. II, p. 492.) “The life of union with God marks the summit of the Dominican life, the apostolate finds its source there.” (Joret, The Dominican Life, p. 82.)

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  1 “And the glory which Thou hast given me, I have given to them; that they may be one as we also are one . . . and the world may know that Thou hast sent me,” etc. John xvii:22–23.

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  2 Dom Berlière, L’Ascèse Bénédictine, p. 4, remarks: “Modern Catholic asceticism is in direct relation and perfect conformity with that of the monks of the east.” He is referring to the desert fathers.

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  3 Apertis oculis ad deificum lumen. Rule of St. Benedict, Prologue.

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  4 Ibid.

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  5 Consuetudines, Migne, P. L., Vol. 153, col. 637 ff. Migne prints Guigo’s text and the extremely interesting commentary by the seventeenth-century general of the Carthusians, Dom Innocent Lemasson. The two together give a very good idea of the substantial framework of Carthusian life, its purpose and its ideals.

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  6 This forms the sixteenth section of the Exordium Cisterciensis Coenobii. See Guignard, Monuments Primitifs de la Règle Cistercienne (Dijon, 1878), p. 71. This work, called the Exordium Parvum, is the official account of the foundation and purpose of Cîteaux, drawn up by St. Stephen Harding when he applied to the Holy See for approval of the basic legislation of the new Order, in the second decade of the twelfth century.

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  7 Vestimenta fratrum secundum locorum qualitatem ubi habitant vel aerum temperiem dentur: quia in frigidis regionibus amplius indigetur, in calidis vero minus. Rule, chap. 53.

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  8 Rule, chap. 39.

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  9 Nos vero qui jam de populo exivimus; qui mundi quaeque pretiosa ac speciosa pro Christo reliquimus; qui omnia pulchre lucentia, canore mulcentia, suave olentia, dulce sapientia, tactu placentia, cuncta denique oblectamenta corporea arbitrati sumus ut stercora, ut Christum lucrifaciamus: quorum, quaeso, in his devotionem excitare intendimus? Apologia ad Guillelmum, chap, xii, No. 38.

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  10 The question came up again in the time of St. Bernard. The second generation of Cistercians, who numbered many experts on chant, like William of Rievaulx and Guy of Trois Fontaines, made a burning issue of it. They ended up by introducing a more or less definite reform and codification of norms governing the purity of chant as it was conceived in the monasteries of the White Monks. See Collectanea Cisterctensium Reformatorum, April, 1948, and St. Bernard, De Ratione Cantus, Tract, xiii.

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  11 Cf. Ralph Adams Cram, The Substance of Gothic, p. 116. See also his “Gothic Architecture” in The Catholic Encyclopaedia.

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  12 “L’influence directe de Saint Bernard et l’application exacte de ses principes,” M. Anselme Dimier, O.C.R., Revue du Moyen Age Latin, Vol. Ill (1947), No. 3, p. 269.

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  13 The different bows prescribed for one ascending from the choir of the monks up the low steps or “degrees” that divide the “presbytery” into two sections, the isolation of the altar from the wall, the ceremonies prescribed for priest, deacon, communicants, etc., going around the altar, etc. (see Consuetudines, 53–54), form the elements of a simple, dramatic action that concentrate the attention on the altar itself and on the meaning of the Sacrifice taking place there.

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  14 Orderic Vital, Migne, P. L., Vol. 188, col. 637.

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  15 Rule, chap. 2.

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  16 . . . quippe quibus nec corpora sua nec voluntates licet habere in propria potestate. Ibid., chap. 32.

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  17 Acts iv:13. St. Benedict also refers to this passage in Rule, chap. 33.

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  18 Exordium Magnum, Dist. i, cap. 1. The Exordium Magnum is a much more lengthy document than St. Stephen’s Exordium Parvum, to which we have referred, but it has far less authority. It was probably written by several hands, and much of it is legendary. However, it is full of living and accurate details of Cistercian life in the twelfth century. For the authorship of the Exordium Magnum, see Vacandard’s Vie de Saint Bernard, p. xlix. It is considered certain that the latter part of the Exordium Magnum was written by the German monk Conrad of Eberbach, but the author of the first sections is an unknown monk, probably of Clairvaux.

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  19 See Migne, P. L, Vol. 153, col. 583.

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  20 In the prologue, St. Benedict starts out with an explicit declaration that his Rule is addressed to anyone who wants to save his soul: Ad te mens sermo dirigitur, quisquis abrenuntians propriis voluntatibus, Domino Christo vero regi militaturus, oboedientiae fortissima atque praeclara arma sumis. In various later chapters we find him making provision for those who argue with the abbot (chap. 3), who not only disobey the Rule but make trouble for everybody and are at the same time too stupid to appreciate the force of excommunication (chaps. 23, 28). There is the possibility that honors like the priesthood or the office of prior may turn certain spirits into intriguers and troublemakers (chaps. 60, 63). Divisions may arise in the community from monks taking one another’s defense in quarrels (chap. 67), and the saint even foresees the possibility that some of his subjects may lose their tempers and get into a fight (chap. 68). Yet, with all these possibilities in full view and calmly considered, the Rule lays down prescriptions for preventing disorder and for healing any harm that may be done, and urges everyone to practice mutual obedience in an atmosphere of honor and respect that is nothing short of heroic (chaps. 69, 70).

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  21 The signs of a vocation, according to St. Benedict, are: a real desire of union with God (si vere Deum quaerit), a healthy interest in the liturgical prayers of the monks (si sollicitus sit ad opus Dei), willingness to learn obedience and to accept the humiliations and hardships of the common life. Rule, chap. 56.

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  22 De Gradibus Humilitatis, No. 14.

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  23 I John iv:7, 8, 20, 12.

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  24 De Gradibus Humilitatis, vii, 20.

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  25 Spiritual Directory, Translation (2nd ed.; Gethsemani, 1946), p. 36.

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  26 St. Bernard, Sermo iii de Assumptione, No. 2.

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  27 Vobis frates alia quam aliis de saeculo, out certe aliter dicenda sunt (In Cant, i, No. 1). These are the opening words of the first sermon. St. Bernard appeals to the authority of St. Paul who “spoke wisdom among the perfect” (I Cor. ii:6) and tells his monks that he knows them to be well exercised in asceticism and wishes them to proceed with him to more contemplative studies—Jam acceditur ad hunc sacrum theoricum sermonem (Ibid., i, No. 3).

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  28 Gilson, Mystical Theology of St. Bernard, pp. 13–17. Dom David Knowles, The Monastic Order in England, p. 218.

 

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