Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Memorial of Saint Bernard, abbot and Doctor of the Church

(Ezekiel 28:1-10; Matthew 19;23-30)

Today the Church remembers one of the most influential men of the twelfth century. St. Bernard of Clairvaux not only spear-headed the Cistercian reform movement of monasticism; he also advised popes and kings.  His message was so compelling that it brought together the resources for the second crusade.

By the eleventh century Benedictine monasticism had largely abandoned its founding ideal.  A group of Benedictines founded the monastery at Citeaux, France, to return to manual labor and prayer.  The project floundered until Bernard joined it with thirty companions.  The Cistercians promoted not only manual work but also poverty as Jesus recommends in today’s gospel.  They recognized that riches, like power, tends to corrupt and that Jesus called his followers to a life of simplicity.

Many people today pursue a life of wealth and pleasure.  Not infrequently they lose solidarity with both the poor and the Lord.  We must try to avoid this mortal error.  Living simply in the spirit of St. Bernard, we can find companionship with God and neighbor.

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