Pages

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Homily for Memorial of St. Bernard

Homily for the Memorial of
St. Bernard of Clairvaux

Aug. 20, 2024
Collect
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

St. Bernard Preaching (Emile Signol)

The collect notes that St. Bernard of Clairvaux was a man consumed with zeal for God’s house and a light shining and burning in Christ’s Church.  He was the ecclesiastical giant of the 12th century, Europe’s citizen of the century, if you will.

Early in that century, at around 21 years old, Bernard decided to join a new monastery that was experimenting with a reform of the Benedictine tradition.  This monastery was in a place called Citeaux, whose name means “reeds”; the place was a swamp.  Bernard didn’t show up alone but came with 30 other young men, including 4 of his brothers, relatives, and friends.  He should be the patron saint of vocation directors!

And suddenly, Citeaux began to flourish.  When the monastery became crowded, Abbot St. Stephen Harding (an Englishman—they, too, can be holy[1]) started sending out monks to found daughter houses.  So the Cistercian Order—the monks of Citeaux—was born.

St. Stephen designated Bernard in 1115 to lead a band of monks to establish a new monastery.  He’d been at Citeaux no more than 5 years, and perhaps as little as 3 years, and he was just 25 years old!  So Bernard and his group settled in a place called the Valley of Wormwood, apparently not a very hospitable place.  In the Middle Ages, new monasteries tended to be established in places that no one wanted as farmland or a center of trade or military defense; rather, in swamps, deserts, or other wilderness areas. 

Bernard proved to be an effective leader.  Benedict XVI says, “Bernard firmly recalled the need for a sober and measured life, at table as in clothing and monastic buildings, and recommended the support and care of the poor.”[2]  Soon the monastery became known as Clairvaux, “the Valley of Light.”  Hence 2 allusions to light in our collect today.  It grew, and soon was founding its own daughter houses.

Besides that, over the course of the next generation Bernard became renowned as a preacher, letter writer, theologian, mediator of disputes both civil and ecclesiastical, and a man widely consulted for his wisdom, prudence, and learning.

He defended the Church’s doctrine against several heresies of the day.  He defended the Jews against the violence that broke out sporadically against them out of ignorance, prejudice, and avarice.  All this is the background for the collect’s describing the saint as “a man consumed with zeal for [God’s] house and a light shining and burning in [Christ’s] Church.”

In his writing and preaching St. Bernard defended the Church’s traditional way of doing theology, relying entirely on the Sacred Scriptures and the teachings of the Fathers of the Church.  The key to all his teaching is Jesus.  Pope Benedict again:  “Jesus alone—Bernard insists …--is ‘honey in the mouth, song to the ear, jubilation in the heart.  The title Doctor Mellifluus [honey-flowing], attributed to Bernard by tradition, stems precisely from this; indeed, his praise of Jesus Christ ‘flowed like honey.’ . . .  ‘All food of the soul is dry’ he professed, ‘unless it is moistened with this oil; insipid, unless it is seasoned with this salt.  What you write has no savor for me unless I have read Jesus in it.’”  Benedict continues:  “For Bernard, in fact, true knowledge of God consisted in a personal, profound experience of Jesus Christ and of his love.  And, dear brothers and sisters [Benedict is giving a Wednesday audience], this is true for every Christian:  faith is first and foremost a personal, intimate encounter with Jesus; it is having an experience of his closeness, his friendship, and his love.”[3]

Where shall we find Jesus, the Light of the World, who transformed the Valley of Wormwood into the Valley of Light?  What was the source of the light that Bernard brought to his monks, to the Church, and to all who read or study his life?  There are 3 sources that lead us to Jesus:  the Scriptures, the Fathers, and prayer.



[1] Addressed to Irish Christian Brothers.

[2] Wednesday audience, Oct. 21, 2009, in Church Fathers and Teachers from Saint Leo the Great to Peter Lombard (San Francisco: Ignatius, 2010), p. 158.

[3] Ibid., pp. 159-160.

No comments:

Post a Comment