Homily
for the Memorial
of St. Hildegard
Tuesday, 24th Week of Ordinary Time
Collect
Sept. 17, 2024
1 Cor 12: 12-14,
27-31
Christian
Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
Benedict XVI had such high regard for St. Hildegard of Bingen that he devoted 2 of his Wednesday audiences to her in 2010 during his long series on the Fathers and Doctors of the Church, and in 2012 he declared her a Doctor, only the 4th woman so designated. That she was German probably didn’t hurt her standing in his eyes.
Hildegard
lived in the 12th century, a contemporary of Bernard of Clairvaux, who approved
of her mystical writings, as also did Pope Eugene III.
St.
Paul says that all Christians “were given to drink of one Spirit” (1 Cor
12:14). Hildegard drank deeply from that
spring, and she exercised several of the spiritual gifts that Paul mentions,
e.g., prophecy, teaching, and administration (12:27-31). She commented on Scripture, lives of the
saints, the moral life, medicine, and the natural sciences, and she composed
music. With a pure and humble heart, she
sought God’s eternal glory (Collect) and teaches us to do that thru her
writings, her music, and her correspondence with popes, bishops, kings, and
religious.
Hildegard
teaches that God is the life of the universe, that humans are the peak of
creation, that Christ is our life, that the Church is his bride. She reminds church leaders and religious that
renewal or reform doesn’t come from changing structures but from repentance and
conversion, from thinking and living our vocations, from union with Christ.
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