The very air is vibrating with the eschaton in these days
The wind whirls the crackling leaves about our heads
The mournful farewell of the migrating birds wings away
The stark remnants of harvest, sentineling the fields
The trampling of deer hooves
The tapping of keyboards
The acrid smell of burning leaves
The very air is vibrating with the end times, the waning days, the last things
It is a deciduous season
On this Solemnity of Christ the King we have caught the liturgical year on a burning day
Today we grasp the image of Christ stepping forcefully into a world of decay and degeneration.
Do we need to be told that our world is imprisoned within the confines of a mercenary mercantilism, a pernicious pecuniary possessivism, a bastion of blatant bigotry?
Can we not see the illness around us, gaunt specters of neglect, of normlessness, of inattention?
Can we not witness for ourselves the hunger of the masses, the hunger for food, for a modicum of decency, for respect at the basest level, for affection of the most minimal kind?
Can we not hear the empty rhetoric of choice and freedom which clang across the landscape of our national condition, cutting like naked swords into the most intimate confines of human safety?
Can we not feel the chill of nakedness in our bones as so many men and women and children die in the streets of starvation?
Can we not taste the debilitation of human dignity in our brothers and sisters brought low by addictions, and mental illness and simple hopelessness?
Can we not understand the spiraling parameters of life in a deciduous season?
And not only our world, ourselves
Do we not know what it is like to feel hopeless, unloved, unwanted?
Do we not hear the echoing in our hearts, reverberating the cry for a need to belong, to be a part, to be one and not even know what the one is?
Do we not understand the raw nakedness of spirit, the hunger for home, the imprisonment of self-doubt?
And like the sheep and the goats, we sometimes feel separated from our true selves, longing in the acrimony of the waning days, a deciduous season, for the path to a common pasture, a new horizon.
And that is what God gives us
Like the phoenix rising from the ashes of despair, we too know the joy of new birth.
That is the good news of fading days
For even as the air vibrates with the finality of the last days, the first days are already engendering themselves in the loins of Creation.
In the midst of decay and denegation, a tiny heart begins to beat faintly in the womb of a woman whose audacious yes whirls around us like the wind, and calls the birds home and renews these days with the promise of child cries echoing down the corridors of time. Child cries that ring like the triumph of the King of Kings.
Just as we are ending, we are beginning and thus we become entangled in the great cycle of Grace, God’s infinite plan of judgment and reconciliation, division and reunion
Just as the sheep are separated from goats, they are summoned back to the one flock by the call of the infant shepherd cascading across the hills.
Calling us to a new world, a new life, a new vocation, a new day.
and so
In the midst of a deciduous season, we look for a brighter promise
A day when division is unknown and we can collapse into the apocotastasis of pure beatitude.
And in that new day, vibrating like the air on the heels of the eschaton
our lives will be made radical and those of our brothers and sisters will be renewed in a benevolent storm of grace, then we will see one another clothed in glory and light in the blush of a daybreak rising over the chill of a winter’s night. We will see one another in the awesome reality of coming to be.
And our spirits will soar on the wings of eagles above the calculus of daily hunger and the starvation of the world, and we shall mount the heights of holiness, in the charmed arête of godliness. We will be saints. We will have a clear vision of the world above the clouds of doubt, the thunderheads of despair.
And our minds will invent new plans, conceive new qualities, break down prison walls, engage new images, dream new dreams of vibrant wind and devastating light. We will be new born in an advent of peace, a season of conception, we and all around us.
And our souls will hover and shimmer, rising above the earth like a shining host, like a glistening drop of wine, like a man risen from the dead standing among the stark remnants of harvest with a look of triumph on his crowned brow and we will experience the purest love of God in the communion of this altar.
-
RECTOR’S CONFERENCE
NOVEMBER 5, 2008
THE PARABLE OF HUMAN FORMATION, THE PARABLE OF CHRIST
In the convocation address that began this school year, I remarked on several aspects of formation drawn from the thought of John Henry Newman. Today, I would like to continue these reflections by way of an examination of Newman’s understanding of Christology and the way in which Christology informs the task of human formation in a seminary and school of theology. Newman’s understanding of the event of Jesus Christ comes by way of his appreciation of the idea of parable, and so, I will begin the reflections today with a short definition of parable.
THE CHARACTER OF PARABLE
A parable is defined in Aristotle’s Rhetoric as an example ( or a type of proof. The parableis, at its root a comparison or an exposition of a relationship between two terms. One of the defining qualities of a parable is the presence of “multiple meanings [which] lie hidden within the complexities of a narrative, and these challenge or provoke the recipient to interpretation. Parables are lures for interpretation and also revelation of the very process of interpretation itself.”[112] Parables create tension by their very nature, and therefore, their interpretation takes on a quality of multivalence, even infinite interpretability. At the heart of parable is a creative tension that is, ultimately, irresolvable.In Newman’s estimation, God must be understood like a parable. God is not a subject to be exhausted by human discourse but an immeasurable invitation. “He, though One, is a sort of world of worlds in Himself, giving birth in our minds to an infinite number of distinct truths, each ineffably more mysterious than any thing that is found in this universe of space and time.”[121]
THE PARABLE AND INCARNATION
The parable is also profoundly associated with Christ for Newman; it is inculcated within the very heart of the Christian mystery. Jesus not only told parables, his very being was a parable. The Incarnation can be understood in Newman as a parabolic encounter in the following way. Christ is realized (that is, made more real to us) in the context of Christian belief as being God and a Human Being. This juxtaposition does not seem to lend itself to intelligent explanation. Rather it affords the opportunity, not of knowing or understanding or comprehending the Incarnation as a fixed horizon upon which to focus or a determined vantage point from which to originate and thereby reducing it to the formulaic, even the idolatrous, but for entering into a relationship with the limitless horizon of the Incarnate God. The Incarnation reveals the reality that cannot be perceived at first sight. Newman states it this way in his Christmas sermon of 1835:
He came in lowliness and want; born amid the tumults of a mixed and busy multitude, cast aside into the outhouse of a crowded inn, laid to His first rest among the brute cattle. He grew up, as if the native of a despised city, and was bred to a humble craft. He bore to live in a world that slighted Him, for He lived in it, in order in due time to die for it. He came as the appointed Priest, to offer sacrifice for those who took no part in the act of worship; He came to offer up for sinners that precious blood which was meritorious by virtue of His Divine Anointing. He died, to rise again the third day, the Sun of Righteousness, fully displaying that splendour which had hitherto been concealed by the morning clouds., and He rose from the lowly manger to the right hand of power,—raising human nature, for Man has redeemed us, Man is set above all creatures, as one with the Creator, Man shall judge man at the last day.
Things are not what they seem to be and this engagement with mystery, realized not as that which cannot be known, but that which is infinitely knowable is, for Newman orthodoxy. Heresy, on the other hand, is the reckless attempt to alleviate the tension of the parable, to solve the problem, or to define the mystery of God. Falling back heavily (or even lightly) on one of the constitutive terms of the parable, God or Man compromises our ability to perceive the reality of the Incarnation which is the precarious yet dynamic and fruitful balancing on the edge of the parabolic knife, the meeting point of the two terms.
PARABLE AND CHRISTIAN MYSTERY
This central insight into the parabolic nature of the reality of the Incarnation fanned out, for Newman, into other areas of discourse within the context of the Christian mystery. The tension that defines Jesus, the God-Man, remains the focal point and the model for other parabolic discourse in the life of the Church. For example, doctrinal formulations are parabolic because they unveil the generative energy of the Incarnate Word. This parabolic dimension impinges on the heart of the understanding of inspiration in Scripture. It touches on sacramental theology, the nature of Church life, education and religious life. In other words, the parabolic tension in the life of the Church reflects the central mystery of the Church, the parable of Jesus. Of course, this model has ramifications for the specialized discourse that engaged Newman for almost sixty-five years, the discourse of preaching and theology. In this scheme, rather than solving problems and providing definitive answers, preaching and theology must somehow promote the inherent tension found at the dynamic heart of Christianity. The task of the preacher/theologian in this model becomes the encouragement of fertile tension in order to advance an ever-deepening and profound relationship with the person of Jesus. It is the encouragement of a lack of completeness and a resistance to all calcifying factors within Christian discourse. It is the insistence on the position that all “answers” are in some way provisional, and growth and change in the individual and in the Church are essential for the preservation of the central mystery. In the Oxford University Sermons, Newman proposes of the Christian that: “His Saviour has interpreted for him the faint or broken accents of Nature; and that in them, so interpreted, he has, as if in some old prophecy, at once the evidence and the lasting memorial of the truths of the Gospel.”[141]
NEWMAN AND THE POETIC REALITY OF CHRIST
Newman’s Christology is predicated on the maintenance of that largeness which is demanded in the parabolic encounter and which therefore transcends the scientific, historical question. The parabolic tension inherent in the central principle of Christianity is that of the poem of the all divine and the all human. Scientific and historical questions analyze, dissect and define, whereas poetic discourse is enhancing, inviting, and broadening For Newman, the nature of all religious discourse was ultimately poetic. It invites. Newman even applied this poetic nature to the discourse of theology, particularly the creed. The creed was ultimately a poem and in viewing it as poem, it was possible to re-imagine the theological discourse of the early Church. In order to perceive the poetic nature of the God-Man, Newman insisted on a return to the patristic sources of Christology, to the thought of Nicea, St. Athanasius, St. Leo the Great and the Council of Chalcedon. For Newman, the tensile definition of Chalcedon, describing in parabolic terms the historical reality of Jesus, at once Jesus of Nazareth and the eternal Christ, was the matter of Christianity, its sole point of reference, its teaching, its worship, and its life. And, as the destiny of the human person was to fall into the reality of Christ, just as it had fallen into the reality of sin, thus, the Incarnate Word, defines the nature of the human person.
HUMAN FORMATION AND CONFORMITY TO CHRIST
Newman’s reflections upon the particular nature of the event of the Incarnation give us insight into the nature of human formation. The goal of human formation in the context of a Christian community of faith is clear. It is the goal of St. Paul, writing to the Corinthians, “He who is united to the Lord becomes one spirit with him.”
The natural development of the person is to be more like Christ who provides the model of humanity in the context of Christianity. We fail to realize our authentic humanity if we fail to recognize the call of St. Paul in the letter to the Corinthians. We fail to recognize our full potential when we insist upon living into the reality of the Fall of Adam and its attendant ills. Human formation becomes then the foundation of all Christian formation, as Pope John Paul tells us in Pastores Dabo Vobis. “The whole work of priestly formation would be deprived of its necessary foundation if it lacked a suitable human formation.” . “The priest should be able to know the depths of the human heart, to perceive difficulties and problems, to make meeting and dialogue ways to create trust and cooperation, to express serene and objective judgments.” He can do this because he has conformed his life to the parable of the Incarnation. This theme is not unique in the thought of the late Holy Father. It is rather one that pervades twentieth-century theology, the search for the authentic meaning of the human person in an age when false and indeed homicidal understandings of freedom and choice permeate the landscape of a culture littered with the debris of death. We see the traces of this renewed emphasis in anthropology in the work of the theologians of the Nouvelle Theologies, its outlines in the writings of Pope Pius XII, and its elucidation in the thought of the Second Vatican Council. Modern Man wishes to know himself, and the consistent message of the Church is that this knowledge is only possible through and with Christ. Furthermore, we realize our complete humanity not only by conformity to the behavior of Jesus, what would Jesus do? But also through the modality of Jesus. How is Jesus in the world, in what manner does he present himself? What is his dynamic quality?
Newman’s reflections and those of Pope John Paul II in Pastores Dabo Vobis, help us to understand the Christological dimension of human formation. I would offer three insights that come from these reflections that may provide an adequate guide to looking at the question of human formation, whether that is in the setting of a seminary, a parish, a presbyterate or a diocese.
THREE CHRISTOLOGICAL INSIGHTS INTO THE NATURE OF THE HUMAN PERSON
The first Christological insight into human formation in the thought of Newman follows from Newman’s understanding of the doctrine of the Incarnation. Our profession of the Rule of Faith of the Council of Chalcedon unveils a richness to the Christ event that extends beyond the apprehension of the physical person of Jesus of Nazareth. Perception of the Jesus of history is perception of the Christ of faith. Things are not what they seem to be by way of the senses. Through the senses, Jesus is a Jewish itinerate preacher of a certain time and place with messianic pretensions, the historical Jesus. His execution is a barrier to the full realization of his being. St. Paul elucidates this point with his insight that “we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block and to Gentiles foolishness.” There is more to the cross however than meets the eye. From this Christological insight we discover the central principle of Christian existence, the presence of a sacramental imagination. The sacramental imagination, by which we discern the reality lurking behind and beyond the physical species governs the life of faith. We celebrate it daily in the Eucharist. As priests, we announce it in the Holy Mass: Ecce Agnus Dei, ecce qui tollit peccata mundi. We make this audacious announcement while having the impunity to hold what to the eyes of sight appears to be a mere piece of bread, a cup of common wine. The sacramental imagination proclaims with boldness: things are not what they seem to be. There is more here than meets the eye. This boldness is drawn from the energy of the simultaneous presence of the Jesus of History and the Christ of Faith. As we proclaim this reality with such boldness, we also realize that it extends beyond the action of the altar to the world, indeed to the whole world. The Eucharist as source and summit, both feeds and gains momentum from the action of the sacramental reality of Christ in the world, indeed in the most mundane aspects of the human condition. This is the pastoral instinct of the priest. The implementation of the sacramental imagination in daily living, in daily pastoral care is his license to make the bold pronouncements of the liturgy. The priest looks at the strengths and weakness of the flock and proclaims, there is more here than meets the eye. He gazes upon the troubling and troublesome parishioners and knows, there is more here than meets the eye. He understands that this paradox is the bread and butter of discipleship, his constant challenge, his most ardent desire, and his greatest aspiration. Again we look at the definition of parable mentioned earlier. One of the defining qualities of a parable is the presence of “multiple meanings [which] lie hidden within the complexities of a narrative, and these challenge or provoke the recipient to interpretation.” Our human formation depends upon our ability to transfer the parabolic insight of Christology into the daily narrative of the Church. We look upon our fellow human beings in the context of parabolic narrative. We search behind and beyond what is presented by the context of frail humanity and realize that the folly of their crosses, the scandal of their lives are not their ends anymore than the cross with its fearsome presentation exhausted the reality of the living God present in the person of Jesus. There are multiple meanings in every life. That is pastoral care. But, human formation also depends upon our ability to turn the generative power of this insight, that there is more here than meets the eye, upon our selves. We must not reduce ourselves to our daily failures, our momentary lapses, or the internal scandals that appear, perhaps only to the inner eye of our imagination. The sacramental imagination is self-perception and sometimes the greatest pastoral care is that which we must offer ourselves. Pope John Paul remarked, “Pastoral study and action direct one to an inner source, … an ever-deeper communion with the pastoral charity of Jesus.”
The second Christological insight for human formation drawn from Newman is that tension is the only way to growth. The Incarnation, as the central principle of our faith and our living is a tensile reality. It tugs at the mind and the heart with contrariety. This tension, central to the orthodox expression of faith becomes the very engine, the energy of the life of the Church. One way of understanding this necessary complexity, this tension is in the realization of emotional maturity. The immature person seeks facility. The immature person is completely self-referential. The immature person is simple. The immature person is a kind of Arian, a psychological heretic. Often, perhaps all too often, this immaturity is expressed among priests as a kind of narcissism. My opinion is the only one that counts. I must have the last word in every conversation. Only my needs need to be met. The inability to see ourselves as part of a larger world, a greater good is the essence of narcissism. Some scholars see the prevalence of the narcissistic personality at the core of the Church’s scandals surrounding sexuality. A less dramatic form of narcissism is a kind of clericalism that seeks privilege, entitlement, or even profit from the total gift of vocation that God has given to us. We cannot build our egos by way of the gift of vocation. The narcissistic personality sees the needs of others as intrusions on his or her fulfillment, or more sinisterly, the means of his or her fulfillment. The narcissistic personality cannot find a place in formation because he does not perceive the need for formation. He has all of the answers. One thing, however, is very clear. The Church has no need for any more narcissistic priests, deacons or lay ministers. There is no room in the Church for the completely self-referential, the guru, or the alternative formator. Why? Because the narcissistic personality thinks he has all of the answers and sees no value in the pursuit of discipleship at all. Emotional maturity is the ability to see my needs and the needs of the other as complimentary. Bound together on a common journey of the discovery of God, the pastor and the parishioner find common hopes, common frustrations and common dreams in the tensile engagement with the God who is beyond all understanding. Earlier this year, the Holy See issued a document on the use of psychology in the formation of seminarians. That document listed some of the qualities of emotional maturity that seminarians must demonstrate. They bear listing here:
• A positive and stable sense of identity
• A solid sense of belonging
• The freedom to be enthused by great ideas and to realize them
• The courage to make decisions and stay faithful to them
• The capacity to correct oneself
• An appreciation of the beautiful and the true
• Trust
• Integrated sexuality
Emotional maturity implies the ability to continually rethink and reform assumptions, ideas and conceptions, to suspend judgment, to seek beyond the eternal, “I”. Emotional maturity is the ability to change one’s mind as one grasps the every deeper, ever broader, ever wider reality of men and women who are images of God, the God that cannot be reduced to the mirror image of my preferences, my opinions, my goals. This maturity invariably evokes tension in the person, but this tension is the vibrating heartstring of an intense, intimate relationship with the divine and human Christ who invites us into the life of God himself. As Pope Benedict says: “Fellowship in the Body of Christ means fellowship with one another.. mutual acceptance, giving and receiving on both sides.”
The third Christological insight for human formation is the necessity of the development of the poetical sensibility. We live today in a culture defined by utility and popularism. Newman referred to the popular as the fansical and defined it as that which engaged the person for a moment, in a defined aspect of the personality but was not ultimately fulfilling by way of its simplicity. We might refer to this same reality as popular culture, a life lived in the top forty, the newest fad, or the latest celebrity. The utilitarian is defined by Newman as that which is narrowly perceived to fulfill certain needs in the human condition, but only on a provisional basis. We live in a culture that promotes both of these values. Gabriel Marcel defined the two pursuits of the human mind as problem solving and mystery seeking. The problem solving man seeks solutions, the mystery seeking man seeks inspiration. Inspiration is neither utilitarian nor popular.
The paradox of modern humanity is that while we live in a culture that presents utility and the popular as ends, we are still possessed of human hearts that long for the expansive horizons of the poetic, even though we no longer have the language to talk about it. This is pastoral leadership’s greatest challenge and its greatest opportunity. Newman insists that religion is ultimately, to use his expression, poetical. It requires time and devotion to fully begin to appreciate its gifts. It requires a lifetime of engagement that extends beyond the top forty, the up-to-date, or the relevant. It realizes that the cult of immediate relevance is the death of God, whose mysteries cannot be fathomed in a thousand “readings”, “hearings” or “sightings”. Pope Benedict has remarked: “Faith creates culture and is culture … It tells man who he is and how he should go about being human.” When we know this we have attained true humanity. And so, the priest must necessarily seek the expansion of cultural horizons, finding meaning in the arts, in literature and in other expressions of the human spirit that transcend the utilitarian and popular mentality. The priest, as pastoral minister, must understand popular culture, but he must not live in popular culture. He must not see the bounds of culture in the ephemeral and the passing. Learning to view art, to listen to music, to experience drama, to read literature and poetry is necessary because it trains the mind, the heart and the spirit toward the transcendent. It gives the priest depth perception, encouraging him to guide his life, not by that which is temporary but that which infinitely engages. In learning to appreciate art and poetry, the priest learns to look for the art and poetry in the mundane, daily tasks of spiritual and pastoral care. In learning to look at art, he learns to look at the world as potential rather than finality. In learning to read literature, he seeks the imaginative horizons of the page in the nursing home patient, the sick, the dying, the student, the homebound and, indeed, himself. Again the Holy Father has remarked: “All sacred images are, without exception … images of the resurrection. History is read in the light of the resurrection and for that very reason they are images of hope, giving us the assurance of the world to come.”
The inculcation of the poetic sensibility leads us to prayer. Prayer, likewise, in our cultural understanding can be highly utilitarian. How often does the priest hear: “I am frustrated, my prayer is not working.” Yet the object of prayer is not utilitarian fulfillment but an immersion in the depths of the life of God. It is communion with God. It takes time and does not necessarily yield immediately gratifying results. Prayer is a commitment to the poetic and parabolic life of God, one that expands over time and draws the person of prayer into the folds of a relationship that cannot be exhausted by first acquaintance. Prayer familiarizes us with the parabolic God and makes us love him, and in loving him, loving the Other and ultimately (yet paradoxically, firstly) our true selves. The ability to love, truly love, unveils the mystery of God who is love in the actions of the human heart. We experience this love, this poetry, parable, this prayer most profoundly in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, by which we offer true immolation to the lies which plague modern man as surely as the lies of the serpent plagued our ancestors in faith. As the fragmented pieces of the Host are re-gathered in the body of the Church we fulfill the prayer of Christ, that they may be one. We find once more that original unity of self lost in the Fall. We discover once more our profound oneness with God. We become One by becoming more like Christ, we become truly who we are by conforming our life and our MODE of being to his. The Eucharist then forms the ultimate parabolic parameters of human formation. It tells us who we are.
These are challenging insights. However, equipped with these insights, we have the raw matter of living a full life, the only kind of full life, a life in union with Christ and in union with the source of our being, the Holy Trinity. With these insights we have the potential to understand more profoundly the powerful longing that churns within us. With these insights about Christ, we can see clearly who we are amid the encircling gloom of social maledictions, the swirling fog of a culture of mendacity. With these insights we know who we are, who we truly are within the context of the lies that sometimes cloud our senses both external and internal. The realization of these insights is, in essence, the parabolic project of our seminaries, our schools of theology, our parishes, our dioceses, our institutions. We can, in this context, only rely upon the light of God revealed to us in the face of Jesus to continue to enlighten us. Perhaps we can find no better words to formulate our prayer than those of Cardinal Newman himself:
LEAD, Kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
Lead Thou me on!
The night is dark, and I am far from home—
Lead Thou me on! Keep Thou my feet: I do not ask to see 5
The distant scene,—
one step enough for me.
I was not ever thus, nor pray’d that Thou
Shouldst lead me on.
I loved to choose and see my path; but now
Lead Thou me on! 10
I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
Pride ruled my will: remember not past years.
So long Thy power hath blest me, sure it still
Will lead me on,
O’er moor and fen, o’er crag and torrent, till 15
The night is gone;
And with the morn those angel faces smile Which I have loved long since,
and lost awhile.
The Lord be with you
May Almighty God bless, you, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Mary Seat of Wisdom, pray for us. -
This past weekend the earthly remains of Cardinal Newman were transfered from his original resting place at Rednall to the chapel of St. Charles Borromeo at the Birmingham Oratory he founded almost 150 years ago. In the context of the tributes offered to the greatest Catholic theologian since St. Thomas, Birmingham Archbishop, Vincent Nichols called him "a terrifying thinker for his great clarity of mind." Below is the text of the homily preached by the postulator of Newman's cause, Fr. Paul Chavasse:
[A] great and holy man is honoured today. We keep this Sunday as the Feast of All Saints and in doing so we honour all the holy men and women of every age and place now with God in Heaven. This celebration therefore teaches us, if it teaches us anything, that holiness is what we are all called to show forth. It is not the preserve of the few, not even the vocation of the many; it is the call given to us all without exception. The Gospel we have just heard tells us of the Beatitudes – it lists for us the graces and virtues, the attributes and behaviour we must manifest if we are to be recognisably on the way to being holy. Hearing the Beatitudes on this feast should make us reflect as to whether this is a description of my life today. Is it a more accurate picture of me today than it was this day last year? Do I at least recognise in it a list of the things I struggle to be, want to be, with Christ as my guide and with His grace transforming me? If we take our Christian vocation seriously, if we truly want to become what Christ calls us to be, then the Beatitudes must forever remain the foundation charter for our lives. We should not say: "This could be me" but "This will be me", even if not completely here on earth, then at least after Purgatory has done its job and I am with God in heaven. We do know of course that even here on earth there are those who show forth the life of the Beatitudes to a high degree. Cardinal Newman himself wrote of them as the ones who "have set up a standard before us of truth, of magnanimity, of holiness, of love". They are "raised up to be monuments and lessons, they remind us of God, they introduce us into the unseen world, they teach us what Christ loves....". In 1991 the late Pope John Paul II recognised that this was true of John Henry Newman himself, and, in declaring the Cardinal "Venerable" - that is "able to be venerated" - he was saying that this great Englishman had indeed lived the Beatitudes, the virtues of the Christian life to an heroic degree. Not to perfection, of course not, but to a degree quite out of the ordinary – that is what a hero is – and that his example is worthy of being imitated by us. "A Saint in the making" who already calls others to aspire to a similar state of life.
Some may say that this role of Cardinal Newman rests on all his life's work: his writings, his sermons, the encouragement and advice he gave to others in his letters, his tireless work for educating the laity, his service of the poor here in Birmingham – the list goes on and all of it is true. We don't need physical remains in order to be inspired by a man like that. And yet: despite it all the human heart still longs for the visible, for that special tangible reminder of the one who has touched and shaped our lives for the better, whether it is Cardinal Newman or someone else whom we love or hold in veneration – how we will treasure that particular photograph, that special letter, and, yes, that lock of hair. But that said, it is as well that the Church's process does not depend on the presence of the physical remains of those she advances as her canonised saints. Those of us who were present at Rednal just a month ago, when the Cardinal's grave was opened, will never forget the range of emotions through which we passed: Bewilderment that the "shallow grave" reported in 1890, should now be eight feet deep; frustration that foot after foot of earth revealed precisely nothing; worry that perhaps after all and incredibly we might be in the wrong spot; shock at what little was eventually found, and then at the end and most strangely, a sense of the rightness of what had transpired, a feeling of peace, peace of mind that after all Cardinal Newman's fondest wishes had actually been fulfilled. That experience shows too that even after 118 years since he died Cardinal Newman still wanted to teach us a lesson. What is it?
It is surely the lesson the month of November speaks to us about: it is the lesson that our common end, be we who we may, is death and decay and the dissolution of all things. The month begins with All Saints and All Souls: we will all be swept up into that great mass of all the faithful departed, and we hope to become, sooner or later, one with the saints of God. But November ends with the Feast of Christ the King – to remind us who it is we must love and serve, to remind us whose is the Kingdom to which we truly belong, to remind us whose gentle and all persuasive rule calls us from the transitoriness of this life to the glory of the life of the Resurrection. That path to the Kingdom is not always easy: as Cardinal Newman himself wrote: "All God's providences, all God's dealings with us, all his judgments, mercies, warnings, deliverances, tend to peace and repose as their ultimate issue ... after our souls' anxious travail; after the birth of the spirit; after trial and temptation; after sorrow and pain; after daily dyings to the world; after daily risings unto holiness; at length comes that 'rest which remaineth unto the people of God'. After the fever; after weariness and sicknesses; fightings and despondings, languor and fretfulness; struggling and failing, struggling and succeeding; after all the changes and chances of this troubled unhealthy state, at length comes death, at length the white throne of God, at length the Beatific Vision." The lesson we must learn is that, as the Cardinal also said: "He knows what He is about", and that life's trials and difficulties, its joys and its beauty all have the object of shaping us to be friends with God, to be at one with Our Lord: this is the aim and purpose of life. That is what John Henry Newman put into practice his whole life-long; it is what he taught others to do, it is what he is calling us to do today. Cardinal Newman has left us but few earthly remains as focal points for our devotion, as if, and quite explicitly, to point us to that higher goal – as a son of St Philip should – to lead us away from himself and, as he put it in his hymn to St Philip, "towards the bright palace where our God is present throned in high heaven." That is what we would want for us as for himself, and the poignancy of his all but empty grave speaks loudly of it.