Communion
and service
14. Precisely in
gradual detachment from those worldly things which stand in the way of
communion with his Lord, the monk finds the world a place where the beauty of
the Creator and the love of the Redeemer are reflected. In his prayers the monk
utters an epiklesis of the Spirit on the world and is certain that he will be
heard, for this is a sharing in Christ's own prayer. Thus he feels rising
within himself a deep love for humanity, that love which Eastern prayer so
often celebrates as an attribute of God, the friend of men who did not hesitate
to offer his Son so that the world might be saved. In this attitude the monk is
sometimes enabled to contemplate that world already transfigured by the
deifying action of Christ, who died and rose again.
Whatever path the
Spirit has in store for him, the monk is always essentially the man of
communion. Since antiquity this name has also indicated the monastic style of
cenobitic life. Monasticism shows us how there is no true vocation that is not
born of the Church and for the Church. This is attested by the experience of so
many monks who, within their cells, pray with an extraordinary passion, not
only for the human person but for every creature, in a ceaseless cry, that all
may be converted to the saving stream of Christ's love. This path of inner
liberation in openness to the Other makes the monk a man of charity. In the
school of Paul the Apostle, who showed that love is the fulfilling of the law
(cf. Rom 13:10), Eastern monastic communion has always been careful to
guarantee the superiority of love over every law.
This communion is
revealed first and foremost in service to one's brothers in monastic life, but
also to the Church community, in forms which vary in time and place, ranging
from social assistance to itinerant preaching. The Eastern Churches have lived
this endeavor with great generosity, starting with evangelization, the highest
service that the Christian can offer his brother, followed by many other forms
of spiritual and ministerial service. Indeed it can be said that monasticism in
antiquity - and at various times in subsequent ages too - has been the
privileged means for the evangelization of peoples.
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