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Inaugural Address
Archbishop
Daniel, Bishop Steib, Fr. Archabbot, Reverend Fathers and Deacons, Distinguished
Trustees and Overseers, faculty, staff, seminarians and students, honoured
guests. Greetings in the Lord and many thanks for your presence here today as we
celebrate this inauguration, this new era in the life of Saint Meinrad School of
Theology.
Today we inaugurate the tenure of the fourteenth president-rector for this school
of the Lord’s service, Saint Meinrad School of Theology. We are privileged to do
so in the presence of three of my predecessors, Archbishop Daniel, Fr. Eugene
and Fr. Mark. My only other living predecessor cannot join us today, but we must
be somewhat understanding, since Fr. Theodore is 107 years old. Each of these
men, in his own way has contributed to the legacy of Saint Meinrad creatively,
faithfully, productively. Each of them has also realized that Saint Meinrad is
more than the vision of a single person and so, I hope that today is more than
the inauguration of one person, but as all inaugurations must be, the
opportunity to renew the charism of an institution, the spirit of a place, and
the mission of a school that has served the Church for almost 150 years. In
those years, Saint Meinrad has fearlessly risen to meet the challenges that the
Church has faced in good times and in not-so-good times. Saint Meinrad has
responded to the needs of the Body of Christ in countless large and small ways
so that the mission of the Church, the evangelical mission of Christ, might be
perpetuated to the ends of the earth. Saint Meinrad has given thousands upon
thousands of ministers to serve in places far and near to literally millions of
men and women. It has weathered a great civil war, two world wars, two
ecumenical councils, a great depression, the social upheaval of the sixties and
thrived. What more can Saint Meinrad do? What more can it be?
I would like to begin my address this afternoon with a short reflection on the
physical properties of sandstone. I know it seems like an odd beginning, but I
hope it will make some sense, like so many things in life, if we merely look
around. What are the properties of sandstone? The first one we might mention is
that it is one of the most rapaciously absorbent building materials available.
Everything soaks in. Building blocks of sandstone are etched with the rivulets
of thousands of tempests and turmoil. For one hundred and fifty years, these
sandstone walls have soaked in rain and hail, soot and dust and about a million
stories. If these walls could talk! They would tell the stories of young,
impressionable boys who were tossed off a wagon or a bus at the bottom of the
hill and cried their first few nights away in a strange place. They would tell
of adolescents struggling in the wee hours of the morning into a black cassock,
or perhaps into the role it represented as they headed off for silent hours of
recollection. They would tell of discoveries of the deepest secrets of the human
heart, its most impenetrable longings, its confusions, discernments and
debilitations. They would tell of triumph, of glory, of achievement, of
anointing. They would conjugate a billion Latin verbs and a thousand lives. They
would laugh and weep, rejoice and scream the limitless expressions of real men
and women whose lives have been transformed. They bear scars, these walls, real
scars. Sandstone absorbs and remembers.
The second property of sandstone is that it is malleable. You can carve it into
anything. It yields to the tools of formation. It can be transformed into strong
foundation blocks or beautiful sculpture. It is subtle and can be changed. It
seems almost to change of its own volition over time. It can be made into
anything. The walls of this school have endured fire and flood, hurricane and
winter snow and they have given. This school has expanded to include every kind
of person under the sun. It has embraced people of countless cultures, myriads
of ages, complexions, temperaments and intentions. It has taken all of them in
because sandstone is malleable; it changes with the times and the needs of the
Church and the World. It becomes one thing for one generation and something else
for the next remaining all the while resolutely itself. Sandstone shifts with
the times. It is malleable.
Finally, sandstone is beautiful. It is beautiful because it is absorbent and
malleable. It bears its scars well. In fact, it scars become a remarkable facet
of its fabric. The walls of this school bear the unmistakable patina of
experience, of hard knocks, of gentle caresses. The sandstone of the walls of
this school are etched, richly etched with the unmistakable palimpsests of
idealism, promise and hope. It is the idealism of youth, the promise of the
Church, the hope of Christ’s cross.
The history of this institution is written in its walls, an absorbent,
beautifully aged, malleable history. But these walls do not stand as bulwarks to
a formless, ideal past. They stand rather as the prow of a great ship sailing
confidently into the future. We build upon the past, we honour the past, we are
distinguished by the past, but the past is gone and Saint Meinrad exists for
today and formation today, education today is not without its challenges.
Inundated as we are in the utilitarian vision of education and, indeed, of life,
we must take pause in the face of a past filled with so much bold idealism, so
much promise, and so much hope. In our modern world we may often despair of what
has been. We may lament that the great legacy of the Church is dead. We may
decry that its message will fall on deaf ears, that, at least in Western
culture, we no longer have the means of hearing the Gospel, much less of living
it out. Or, if we are to hear the Gospel, it must, necessarily be a perverted
Gospel, a commercialized, sanitized and sound-bit Gospel. In spite of these
cultural sirens, Saint Meinrad, firmly grounded in its past, remains committed
to a set of truths that we have relentlessly pursued these many decades. It is
these truths we must take into the future. It is my prayer, indeed it is my
pledge, that the future of Saint Meinrad is solidly built upon these
foundational truths, truths that we, their bearers, must now enunciate for a new
generation.
The first of these truths is that people want to hear the Gospel and they want to
hear the whole Gospel. In spite of what we may be told, the clarion call of
faith is not dead, nor does it sleep. The ears of humanity are tuned to hear its
faint signals against the ever increasing uproar of its foes, the din of
so-called civilized, cyberized existence. In the recesses of the human heart
there is a yearning for meaning that only Christ can give. The challenge of
preaching and teaching the Gospel message today is not so much the indifference
of its hearers as the lack of fortitude in its preachers. As ministers of the
Gospel, we give up, we despair, we count our weakness as loss. In fact we need
to attend to the true voice of conscience that cannot be stilled in each of us
and hear in that voice the cry for and of the unspeakable name of God, the name
that leaps across the plains of generations and through the cacophonies of
history, the name that utters its forceful syllable against the violence of
wars, both external and internal, the name that is now, in the fullness of time
manifested in the blood-stained face of the saviour, in his searching eyes, in
his patient voice entreating, admonishing us to do this, do all of this in
memory of him. Flannery O’Connor once remarked: For the deaf you must speak
loudly, for the blind, you must draw big pictures. People want to hear the
Gospel, they are dying for it and we must be willing to believe that call if the
work we do here is to make any sense at all. This must be our primary value, the
source and sustenance of our mission, our daily bread.
Why? Because this Gospel is the Truth. The great folly of the post modern world
is the perversion of Truth in radically devolving particularities. Truth cannot
be determined by science alone. Truth cannot be established by economic
legitimation alone. Truth cannot be sustained by language games alone, nor can
it be merely the distillation of a social engagement that will inevitably
rapidly degenerate into a sociological contagion. Rather, his Truth is firmly
established in the heavens and it dictates to the earth, to quote the psalmist.
Cardinal Newman remarked that people will never be satisfied with anything less
than certainty. People want to hear the Gospel and they want to hear the whole
Gospel.
The second value we represent is that people want something challenging. They
want to know that their life’s quest is meaningful. People will devote
themselves to a task if they recognize in that task the ultimate concern of the
great adventure. People want to do something serious with their lives. Even in a
death-dealing culture, there is a respect for life, a respect for the modicum of
self-respect that cannot be robbed from us by commercialism and consumerism. As
Pope Benedict has said: “The knowledge of Christ is a path that demands the
whole of our beings.” People want to engage the fullness of living in the paths
they pursue. The intensity of our mission is a product of the intimacy of what
we encounter in the Eucharist, nothing less than the living God. As the Holy
Father has also noted, “The Eucharist draws us into Jesus' act of self-oblation.
More than just statically receiving the incarnate Logos, we enter into the very
dynamic of his self-giving.” As Christ gives himself in the Eucharist,
completely and without compromise, so we are inspired to give all at the risk of
compromising our understanding and appreciation of the Eucharist. We want to be
challenged and Saint Meinrad, to be true to its mission, must be a place where
people are challenged, challenged to be disciples, men and women of the
Eucharist, challenged to move beyond the mendacity of daily irritations,
challenged to be saints.
The third value that we embody is the value of community. The culture of
unrelenting secularity devolves into the culture of isolation, of the human
person’s increasing per-occupation with his personal loneliness. The long
loneliness of the human condition ended with the sacrificial act of Christ on
the cross, his blood draws us into a corporate reality. We are for each other.
We cannot exist without each other. As the late Pope John Paul remarked: we are
made for one another, created for one another, bound for one another. Father Von
Baltahsar repeatedly remarked that the great fundamental lie of modern humanity
is the loss of belief in the corporate subject, the erroneous belief that we can
do it on our own. As he said in his work In the Fullness of Faith, “The loss of
ability to participate in the corporate subject signifies the direct loss of
Catholic instinct. Where this instinct is absent, people settle for what can be
known within the parameters of the world.” If there is a message that Saint
Meinrad must continually proclaim it is that we are not alone. The bonds of this
community, in good times and in bad, in joy and sorrow, hope and despair, teach
the world a mighty lesson. These sandstone walls engulf us in a profound
reality. We are here for each other, we are part of one another because we are
part of Christ, brothers and sisters untied in a common hope, not sojourners
bound on other journeys. We cannot witness this value by words alone, it must be
witnessed in the very fabric of our being here, woven, knitted, quilted together
into a might tapestry that convinces everyone who steps on this holy ground that
love is still possible, that the witness of the disciples together in one place
is still possible, that unity of heart and mind is still possible, that
compassion is still possible.
If these are our values, then to what will Saint Meinrad commit itself in the
coming years? First, we commit ourselves to the loving formation of each person
who comes here. Vivified brains or ambulatory hearts are insufficient in
themselves to fulfil the great task before us. We must be people of clear heads
and holy hearts. The task of ministry must touch every fibre of their being.
Saint Meinrad must be a place where people leave better than when they came,
regardless of the outcome of their formation. Saint Meinrad is a place to form
ministers who likewise respond to the whole person, the whole community because
they themselves are whole beings. Human formation is the bedrock of what we do.
As Pope John Paul remarked in Pastores Dabo Vobis, If our human development is
neglected or disregarded, then “the work of formation is deprived of its
necessary foundation” The minister who is intelligent without emotional maturity
is no minister, the minister who is good and kind but unable to explain the
basic tenants of faith is no minister. Priests, deacons, lay ministers today are
those who can bring the often disparate strains of the song of postmodern man
into harmony. The minister today is a harbinger of harmony. We can accept
nothing less.
Second we commit ourselves to formation as a way of living. Saint Meinrad is not
a place to prepare ministers. It is a place to be ministers. It is not a place
to train future disciples. It is a place to live discipleship. We are already
into the work of ministry when we step on this hill. We learn to live with one
another, put up with one another, take care of one another, love one another. We
learn that the first lesson of ministry is to be here. We learn to be truly
present to one another, to uphold one another, to appreciate one another. This
is a school of charity. This is a school of consideration. This is a school of
mercy. This is a school of being for the other.
In this regard, we also commit ourselves to the pursuit of intelligence. The
obligation to be intelligent, is, as Lionel Trilling has noted, a moral
obligation. In Christian ministry it is even more so. Saint Meinrad has been
blessed through the years with excellent faculty members, men and women fully
committed to the Gospel and to preparing quality ministers for the Church. That
is a gift from God. As Archbishop Sheen noted in The Priest is not His Own: “The
intellect of the priest is bread to the hungry and drink to the thirst. Our
faith is the satisfaction of the soul’s desire, not the didactic presentation of
a syllogism. The intellectual must meet the pastoral if true theological
education is to take place. Cardinal Newman remarks:
This process of training, by which the intellect, instead of being formed or
sacrificed to some particular or accidental purpose, some specific trade or
profession, or study or science, is disciplined for the sake of others, for the
perception of its proper object, and for its highest culture; it is the standard
of excellence.
Third, and most significantly, we commit our selves to prayer. The truth of all
this frantic action only comes home in the intimacy of a life inundated with
prayer. Prayer is our communion, our living breath, our blood. It connects us to
the source of who we are, as Fr. Guardini remarked: “Prayer creates that open,
moving world, transfused by energy and regulated by reason. Behind it is the
history of all cultures, interwoven with humanity. It is an arch of the sacred
room of revelation where the Truth of the living God is made known to us.”
Prayer is our way of life and unites all of the varying actions of our lives
together into a living edifice, a solid wall of stone, stone that is malleable,
absorbent and beautiful. I cannot lead this school except on my knees. Our staff
and faculty cannot do what they do, except on their knees. We cannot learn
except humbly on our knees. We will be a community on our knees, in perpetual
adoration of the source of our being, in fundamental thanksgiving for the gifts
we have received in every heartbeat, in every word spoken, in every act of love.
If we can do that then we will fulfil the goal of our existence. As Helen Keller
once said: "It is for us to pray not for tasks equal to our powers, but for
powers equal to our tasks, to go forward with a great desire forever beating at
the door of our hearts as we travel toward our distant goal."
Finally, in all of these things, we commit ourselves to excellence, the Greek
virtue of Arete. Excellence in all things is our goal and our guide. Excellence
in the great arcs of formation and in the minute details of daily existence.
Excellence, in our context cannot be accidental. It is purposeful and driven. It
must be the reason for our living. Each person here, no matter what role he or
she may fulfill, is called to fulfill that role with integrity and excellence.
Excellence that is habitual, continual, and purposeful fulfills in us as
individuals and as a community of faith a sense of self-esteem worthy of the
dignity of the sons and daughters of God. Mediocrity, half-heartedness, a spirit
of the mundane have no place at Saint Meinrad. We are called to nothing less
than the excellence of sanctity, growing in holiness and fulfilling our destiny
in Christ. In this pursuit we cannot doubt that the great legacy of the Church
is alive. We can be assured that the message of the Gospel will fall on anxious
ears, that, we will have the means of hearing the Gospel, and living it out in
the daily joys of discipleship.
Why? Why to all of this effort, all of this commitment? Because the Church
deserves the best priests and permanent deacons and lay ministers The Church
deserves intelligent, healthy, creative, prayerful, loving ministers. The Church
deserves ministers who can work with them and for them in evangelizing our world
about the Good News we preach. And when the Church has quality ministers, the
faithful are enriched, built up like living blocks of stone, strong and
beautiful, able to weather the vicissitudes of these tumultuous times, stones of
living faith built into a solid temple. That is Saint Meinrad.
Twenty years ago this summer a 25 year old man drove up this hill. He was
young, energetic, a little scared, thin and had lots of hair. He was trying
something, trying his vocation as a priest. He was unsure, nervous but also full
of hope. It didn’t take long for the blessings, the mystery of Saint Meinrad to
take hold in that young man’s life. He lived within these sandstone walls. He
prayed, he learned, he worked, he cried, he argued, he became frustrated, he was
consoled, he pleaded with God, he laughed, he made friends for a lifetime and he
became attached to a place, Saint Meinrad, a place that was ultimately not only
a school and a place to learn the skills of ministry, but a home. He was
transformed by Saint Meinrad. Saint Meinrad made him the man he would become.
Twenty years later that energetic, scared, thin and hopeful young man has become
the fourteenth president-rector of this School of Theology. But my story is not
an unusual story; in fact, my story is a story I hear every day.
One of the great privileges of my new work is to hear how Saint Meinrad has made
a difference, a REAL difference in the lives of so many men and women around the
world. It is a privilege to know that we are still preaching the Gospel, that we
are still providing the challenge of people’s lives, that we are still doing
that in the cradling boughs of community life. It is a privilege to have you
here this weekend, not to celebrate the fourteenth president-rector, but to
celebrate our school, our alma mater, this unique and holy place called Saint
Meinrad. God bless you for your presence and your patience. Pray for us as we
pray for you each day. God keep you. Mary, Seat of Wisdom, pray for us.
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