Canta et ambula

St Augustine’s sensitivity to music is well documented. In the Confessions he says how struck he was by the singing in the cathedral of Milan: ‘How I wept, deeply moved by your hymns, songs, and the voices that echoed through your Church!’ Better than anyone he has made sense of the jubilus in chant, ‘a certain sound of joy without words, the expression of a mind poured forth in joy’, joy that is ineffable, yet singable. Today, on the last day of the Church’s year, the Divine Office gives us another wonderful text on singing. Augustine speaks here of the kind of singing apt to keep our courage up as we pilgrimage towards hope in a world that often appears like a vale of tears. His words have great poignancy. They resound credibly still as the counsel of a father, a friend: ‘Always go onward in goodness, right faith, good habits. Sing, and walk onwards.’ Thus we shall be preserved from discouragement and pusillanimity.

Tolkien’s Creation

Asked by The Tablet to contribute to its annual Books of the Year supplement, I was happy to recommend a volume that has accompanied me for much of the autumn as I’ve been reading it in small chunks at breakfast: ‘What happens when a classical philologist turns his mind to the study of one of modern literature’s most audacious, best-loved enterprises? Read Giuseppe Pezzini’s Tolkien and the Mystery of Literary Creation to find out. The book is at once an overview of Tolkien’s work and an essay in literary theory. It is elegantly composed. And it’s fun. It will tell you at last what Queen Berúthiel’s cats are all about.’ Professor Pezzini’s book is eye-opening and ear-opening. He invites readers to listen again to the noise Frodo heard ‘in the distance. He knew that it was not leaves, but the sounds of the Sea far-off; a sound he had never heard in waking life, though it had often troubled his dreams. A great desire came over him to climb the tower and see the Sea.’

Irresistible

Among the many things that struck me in Tordis Ørjasæter‘s ‘personal history of the handicapped child in literature’, We Are Not Alone, was this description of Sigrid Undset, which passes on a childhood remembrance of Tordis’s husband Jo, whose father, the poet Tore Ørjasæter, was a close friend of Undset’s: ‘My husband Jo remembers how as a little boy he was lifted up by a very large, very adult person impossible to contradict, but not dangerous, to be placed in an armchair with a picture-book or some toy. Sigrid Undset was not one to crawl around to play with children or to utter baby-talk. In contrast she gave him, each Christmas, well-chosen sports equipment or books.’ Undset, wholly convinced that ‘maternity is life itself’, was unsentimental with regard to the task it represented. Thereby she has something weighty and original to say to our time.

Bl Niels Steensen

“By your endurance you will gain your souls”, says our Lord. Many of us will have ascertained that the times in our lives that have deeply formed us were not necessarily times at which we did lots of stuff, but times during which we endured through something difficult or hard: tensions or conflicts or uncertainty or whatever. Christ uses the melting pot as an image of salvation. It takes patience for all dross to be smelted away. But what remains is durable. The saint we commemorate examples this process. Niels Steensen, born in Copenhagen in 1638, was an internationally renowned physician. Having become a Catholic, he left his career to become a priest, later a bishop. Since for a while he was in charge of the archdiocese of Hamburg, with was then entrusted with the care of Catholics in Denmark and Norway, he was our bishop, too. His health was poor. He travelled ceaselessly without, for that reason, lessening his asceticism. His vision just became brighter. When he died at the age of 48 he was like a ripe pear, ready for picking. The scientist Steensen was sensitive to the beauty of creation. It touches me that he should have written: ‘Lovely is what we see; lovelier still is what we hold as true; loveliest of all is what we cannot comprehend.’

Erasmus Lecture

‘Transhumance, an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity since 2023, is by definition constant drifting across borders. If you are caught up in transhumance you do not stay behind a wall trying to work, or shut, out what people say and do on the other side; you move back-and-forth seeking sustenance in changing landscapes for yourself and your flock. Mireille Gansel develops the metaphor of transhumance in a twofold way. On the one hand, languages constitute pastures. Shepherded from one to the other is significant content — in a poem, novel, treatise, or confessional statement seeking new form. On the other hand, language itself can be thought of as a flock led from winter to summer grazing with the translator as its shepherd. Language, in this account, is a nomad reconciled to the transient nature of any ‘home’.’

From this year’s Erasmus Lecture, now available on YouTube.

Sr Anne-Lise RIP

Sister Anne-Lise Strøm was buried today. We are many who will miss her deeply. She was a fully given person. In a book of conversations she published with Brita Rosenberg in 1997, she described her departure from Oslo in 1961, when she set out for Lourdes to join the convent of enclosed Dominican nuns there, on a hill overlooking the sanctuary: ‘The train started moving. Her father ran alongside it crying out, ‘Anne! Write!’ He was weeping.’ It seemed as if this intelligent, enthusiastic young woman full of joie de vivre was lost to the world. Little did one know. Through her long, faithful monastic life, Sr Anne-Lise became the Catholic Church’s best known (and probably best loved) ambassador in Norway. She directed, taught, consoled, and encouraged countless people with her characteristic mixture of lucid realism and unshakable trust in the transforming power of God’s mercy. She was funny, full of self-irony; at the same time inscrutable, with her mind set on eternity. Grace and experience made her wise. She was a thoroughly loveable human being. May God grant her the hundredfold she herself so credibly embodied.

Towards Dawn

‘It is often casually said that we live in post-Christian times. I believe that statement to be false. Theologically, the term ‘post-Christian’ makes no sense. Christ is the Alpha and the Omega, and all the letters in between. He carries constitutionally the freshness of morning dew. Christianity is of the dawn. If at times, during given periods, we feel enshrouded by twilight, it is because another day is in the making. It seems to me clear that we find ourselves in such a process of awakening now. If we do want to deal in the currency of ‘pre’ and ‘post’, I think it more apposite to suggest that we stand on the threshold of an age I would call ‘post-secular’. Secularisation has run its course. It is exhausted, void of positive finality. The human being, meanwhile, remains alive with deep aspirations. It is an essential task of the Church to listen to these attentively, with respect, then to orient them towards Christ, who carries the comfort and challenge for which the human heart yearns.’ From my new book, Towards Dawn, just published. You can read more about it here.

No Blond Skies

There is clearly a Norway of the imagination. An attentive reader, having seen my note on Emily Dickinson last week, sent me this supremely melancholy poem by the symbolist Émile Nelligan, who says of himself in a moment of near despair: ‘I am the new Norway from which the blond skies have departed’. Nelligan is a tragic figure in the literature of Québec. Afflicted with a bipolar condition he was hospitalised at the age of twenty and remained in institutions until his death at 44. He seems not to have known the soft luminosity that marks even the depths of Norwegian winter – not to mention the summer nights untouched by any darkness at all.

Antisemitism

Throughout the West, antisemitism, the world’s oldest hatred, is raising its ugly head, more or less sublimated in political terms, but instantly recognisable. Much is being written about this development. This is good. Wise heads must think together to counter a trend that lies within the body politic as a latent virus. In such straits I miss the intelligent, humane, fearless voice of Jonathan Sacks. Fortunately many of his videos and texts are available on a website dedicated to his legacy. Rabbi Sacks spoke of antisemitism as ‘the first warning sign of a culture in a state of cognitive collapse. It gives rise to that complex of psychological regressions that lead to evil on a monumental scale: splitting, projection, pathological dualism, dehumanisation, demonisation, a sense of victimhood, and the use of a scapegoat to evade moral responsibility. It allows a culture to blame others for its condition without ever coming to terms with it themselves.’ Those words were written ten years ago. Meanwhile they have only gained in relevance.

Psalmody

In a wise, poetic essay, Armando Pego describes a visit to an abbey where he delves into silence after a train trip alongside travellers full of that joy ‘only the sea can give’. They go on to ‘scatter like solitary starlings’; he, meanwhile, is bound for a definite goal: ‘At Poblet I find the rest the hours of the Office give. Along with a handful of guests, joined by more or less sporadic tourists, or on my own at daybreak or for None, I find myself on a pew distant from the choir, trying to abandon subjective pretensions. We live in times that give great weight to personal experience and sentiment, to that in our ego which is at the same most moving and most onerous. I wish to propose as counterweight an inner life alert to the objectivity of liturgy. I desire to stop being the centre; to lean towards the vertigo of God’s greatness. We can touch it, just about, through psalmody, which lets us glimpse it as a boundless fount of love. There is no trace of a concert or spectacle; there is no enthusiasm, no ecstasy. We make a superhuman effort to rise above our smallness, gathered as a community that, in unison, harmonises stammering. I always come out a loser. About to yield to discouragement, I  console myself that I have had a lesson in humility. Had I been victorious even for a moment, it would all have been in vain.’ You can read the entire piece (in Spanish) here.

Translation Praised

‘Then, of course, there is Artificial, or Inhuman, Intelligence. Thanks to it, translation is mechanised. Feed in some verses by, say, Li Bai, a Chinese poet of the Tang Dynasty, and you find them spewed out in the twinkling of an eye in colloquial American, contractions and all. AI does not limit itself to rendering a given ‘foreign’ language into another. It offers to translate even the vaguest notions that arise out of our fancy’s pond-fog into cogent speech. As a result, we can increasingly dispense ourselves from coming up with our own words. There are, here and there, pragmatic advantages to this. But they come at the cost of catastrophic loss. For what will man turn into as he, formed in the image of the Word, surrenders poetry to algorithmic patterns, logos to digits, with everyone’s speech, everywhere, sounding the same?’

From this year’s Erasmus Lecture, to be published on the internet and in First Things in mid-December.

Norway of the Year

At about this time of year in 1865, Emily Dickinson wrote to her sister, Mrs. J.G. Holland, after an update on family news: ‘It is also November. The noons are more laconic and the sundowns sterner, and Gibraltar lights make the village foreign. November always seemed to be the Norway of the year.’ Like Sadie Stein I have loved those lines since I first came across them, I can’t remember when. Stein speculates about the source of Dickinson’s association: Asbjørnsen and Moe? Immigrants’ tales? One can but speculate. What we can say is this: November, as well as being a time when nature, through processes of death, prepares for sleep is also a time when fields are prepared for next spring’s crops, when the air has a blessed freshness that intensifies breathing, and when subtle symphonies of colours can make you gasp with wonder before dusk.

Acting Beautifully

In an essay about Eucharistic Traces in the work of Peter Handke, Jan-Heiner Tück shows how Handke evidences something of Guardini’s great intuition, that the Mass, by inculcating ritualised, deliberate movement, teaches us to engage beautifully with things.

‘One of the benefits of Holy Mass: I sit properly; I stand up properly, for instance when the Gospel is read; when the homily begins, I sit down properly again; during consecration I fall properly to my knees; while walking up to receive Corpus Christi I find my proper place in a line among other communicants; then I return to my pew by a proper detour.’

To point towards the educative impact of such experience is not pernickety; it is wise; it is to take on board what incarnation means.

War and Peace

For decades, Karl Schlögel has been among the lucidest, learnedest analysts of European historical trends. This week he was awarded the Peace Prize of the German book trade. His acceptance speech is a powerful summons to relinquish naivety and wishful thinking, to think hard and to act bravely: ‘And then it becomes clear that, despite all our knowledge, despite all the experience of previous generations, we must start again from scratch, and that our profound haplessness renders us incapable to describe what is going on before our eyes. The terms we use to describe the new circumstances are inadequate. We are at a loss for words to accurately convey what is happening. This is more than just a lack of concepts or writing skills; it is the loss of the horizon of experience that has formed us till now, a reality where everything we have accumulated over the course of a lifetime seems in question, devalued, even in ruins.’

Synodality

Some weeks ago I visited the abbey church of Otterberg in the Palatinate. It is what remains of a Cistercian monastery founded in the 1160s. Now it serves as joint parish church for a Lutheran and a Catholic parish. The proportions are perfect with gracious aisles, ideal for the processions that were such an important part of the Order’s liturgical life. What chiefly impressed me, though, was this confessional with its metal sign: ‘All Sinners Welcome!’ The exclamation mark is eloquent. It calls out to sinners, ‘You’re one of us – you belong!’ – a sentiment that, if it is sincere, preserves the Christian community from tedious conceit. It struck me as a criterion for synodality. Genuine joint movement is possible from the moment in which I find my place within a body that, conscious of its flagrant imperfection, yet strives to be made perfect, confident that God’s grace does indeed carry and that, to it, nothing is impossible.

Genie

In a brisk piece, Nicola Shulman reflects on ‘the overcompensating sense of self-importance that flourishes in the dark of self-doubt’, a sense likely to erupt ‘with all the towering egotism and sweet relief that a genie might feel after a thousand years in a small brass receptacle’ when some perceived slight rubs the lamp.

It is useful, then, to pay due attention to the surging of pride within us.

It may potentially point the way towards a wound that needs anointing and could be healed, if we’d let it be.

By intercepting the genie we might also, quite simply, prevent ourselves from being silly.

St Teresa

Teresa is a witness to the beautiful dimension of faith. When she speaks of it, she is categorical: ‘The fact of seeing Christ left an impression of his exceeding beauty etched on my soul to this day: once was enough’. This beauty is disturbing, even dangerous. To behold it is to be struck down. It is to walk thenceforth, like Jacob out of Jabbok, with a limp. Teresa illustrates what this means when she speaks of her transverberation, when her heart was pierced by an angel with a fiery lance. The moment has acquired emblematic force in the mystical and aesthetic canons of the West. Bernini’s marble account of it still both enchants and shocks, yet is, for all its formal perfection, but an outsider’s limited view. Teresa stresses the exquisite beauty of the angel, an emissary sent from before the burning holiness of God. The impact on her of this beautiful encounter is complex. So physical was the transfixing that her innards seemed to be drawn out when the lance retreated. So spiritual was it that it left her ‘completely afire with a great love of God’. She makes no apology for not defining the ratio of embodied and transcendent experience. Paradox alone can convey what she went through, as she sums up: ‘It is not bodily pain, but spiritual, though the body has a share in it – indeed, a great share.’ Small wonder that for days she was left as in a stupor. From a talk given ten years ago at the Brompton Oratory.

Light-Filled Lamp

A wonderful text from St Columbanus’s Instructions in today’s vigils: ‘I am a lowly creature but I am still his servant, and I hope that he will choose to wake me from slumber. I hope that he will set me on fire with the flame of his divine love, the flame that burns above the stars, so that I am filled with desire for his love and his fire burns always within me! I hope that I may deserve this, that my little lamp should burn all night in the temple of the Lord and shine on all who enter the house of God! Lord, I beg you in the name of Jesus Christ, your Son and my God, give me a love that cannot stumble so that my lamp can be lit but can never go out: let it burn in me and give light to others.’

Dilexi te

One thing that strikes me on a first reading of Pope Leo XIV’s apostolic exhortation Dilexi te, issued today, is its section on monastic life. In an inspired reading of the Rule of St Benedict, the Holy Father says that the monks of Antiquity enabled the formation of a ‘pedagogy of inclusion’ by ‘forming consciences and transmitting wisdom’ through a sharing of culture. The word ‘inclusion’ is bandied about a lot these days, often without a clear idea of what anyone’s proposing to include others in. The notion that inclusion is a form of hospitality born of a community covenant with a view to producing a transformed society is valuable, constructive.

From a conversation with The Pillar.

Acquiring an Eye

‘Chaste seeing can be re-learned. A simple, unmingled eye can be re-acquired. St Bruno assured his friend Raoul of this during his life’s last decade. Settled in Calabria, he explained the nature of the Carthusian call: “What benefit and divine gladness the desert’s solitude and silence reserve for those who love it, only those who have experienced it can know. Here, the strong can enter into themselves and remain there, with themselves, as much as they like, diligently cultivating seeds of virtue and eating happily the fruits of paradise. Here, they can acquire the eye whose serene gaze wounds the Bridegroom with love. Such an eye, being pure and uncontaminated, allows them to see God.” […] The wound which a chaste eye inflicts does not humiliate or hurt. It is sweet, like the infant’s gaze. It cuts us to the quick but feels like a blessing, reminding us of what sight can be like. To see in this manner is to re-enter paradise, says Bruno. It is part of the process of exchanging the garment of skin for the robe of glory. Sight born of love can become an act of love.’ From Chastity.

A Venetian in Buda

Walking into the refectory of the Benedictine community of Saint Sabina in Budapest this afternoon, I was struck by the large mural on the wall that shows St Gerard Sagredo, the Venetian monk  who became the first bishop of Csanád, addressing his brethren on the eve of his death: ‘Brothers and friends! Tomorrow we shall be called to the supper of the Lamb. Let us make haste and die for Christ!’ The story of Gerard is gripping for several reasons. It shows the European network that underpinned medieval Catholicism, at once enabling and relativising nationhood; it shows the role monasticism played in evangelisation; and it gives credible, amiable human features to an age often presented as lost in mythic mists. Gerard was consecrated a bishop the year St Olav died at Stiklestad, in 1030. He died on 24 September (so his feast is today) in 1046. The sanctoral constantly helps us to place ourselves within a long historical continuity. The way the world is developing at the moment, that is a gift to cherish, and to share.

Continuities

This morning I offered Mass in the church of Trondenes, work on which was begun at about the time when Saint Louis was king of France. The church is established near the lake in which the first Christians in these parts (near modern Harstad) are said to have been baptised in 999 AD by the English Bishop Sigurd, who attended King Olav Tryggvason.

The exquisite high-altar retable is the work of a fifteenth-century Lübeck master. It shows the Mother of God flanked by female relatives, underpinned by male ones. This work not only remained undisturbed through the sixteenth-century reformation; it continued to form the cherished focal point of a church that since the 1530s has belonged to a Lutheran establishment.

Sometimes it takes a trip to the periphery to perceive lines of continuity lost in epicentres of controversy – and so to get help to find one’s bearings.

No Soppy Thinking

‘The structure of human thought creaks’, noted Bishop Daniel E. Flores in a recent lecture, ‘when looking for ways to describe the identity and works of the God revealed in Christ and testified to in Scripture.’ His text offers a blessed corrective to a current tendency in devotion and, regrettably, sometimes in theology to reason and speak soppily. It is bracing to be told that the ‘sources of the Church’s identity and mission lie within the Trinitarian life of God, precisely because the Church participates in this life by grace, in the Spirit.’ Bishop Flores’s lecture is formally about the ramifications of the Council of Nicaea. It is no less an essay in epistemology and in a responsible engagement with history: ‘History is populated by the realism of things done and said, the human acta that are in some way visible to us. This aspect keeps history from being easily malleable to our will. We cannot make it mean and say what we want.’ This insight has immense contemporary relevance far beyond the ivory tower of technical theological discourse.

Hemingway and AI

Hemingway on the creative process: ‘I would stand and look out over the roofs of Paris and think, “Do not worry. You have always written before and you will write now. All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know.” So finally I would write the one true sentence, and then go on from there. It was easy then because there was always one true sentence that I knew or had seen or had heard someone say. If I started to write elaborately, or like someone introducing or presenting something, I found that I could cut that scrollwork or ornament out and throw it away and start with the first true simple declarative sentence I had written. Up in that room I decided that I would write one story about each thing that I knew about. I was trying to do this all the time I was writing, and it was good and severe discipline.’ An exercise AI could never accomplish. It matters to have ears attuned to the true.

Nativity of Mary

Today’s feast invites us to consider that God, who entered history as male, with a gendered specificity that cannot be abstracted; that this God who became man and a man, in whose image and glory we are called to have a share, began his existence in a woman’s womb. The biological process remains a paradigm for ecclesial life. Christ’s birth is both an historical datum and a continuous mystery of transformation. It was not by coincidence that Christians of antiquity adorned the apses of their churches, just above the altar, with wondrous representations of the Theotokos. The Church, Lumen Gentium teaches us, is Marian in essence. This, too, points to a gendered specificity that seeks coherent expression. Only therein will we as believers and members of the Church, whether we are women or men, find our true, essential form. In this symbolic, sacramental interaction of masculinity and femininity, fundamental to Catholic life, we shall find, of this I am convinced, the true response to painful perplexities present in our time. This response is already formulated, thank God; it needn’t be invented anew. From a homily for 8 September.