+ Bruno was born in 1030 in Cologne, Germany. He was educated in Paris and Rheims, France and
ordained to the priesthood around 1055. He taught theology and one of his
students later became Pope Blessed Urban II. Bruno presided over the cathedral
school at Rheims from 1057 to 1075. He criticized the worldliness he saw in his
fellow clergy. He opposed Manasses, Archbishop of Rheims, because of his laxity
and mismanagement and he became chancellor of the archdiocese.
Then following a vision he
received of a secluded hermitage where he could spend his life becoming closer
to God, he retired to a mountain near Chartreuse in Dauphiny in 1084 and with
the help of St. Hugh of Grenoble, he founded what became the first house of the
Carthusian Order. He and his brothers
supported themselves as manuscript copyists.
Bruno became an assistant to
Pope Urban II in 1090, and supported his efforts at reform. Retiring from
public life, he and his companions built a hermitage at Torre, where, in 1095,
the monastery of St. Stephen was built. Bruno combined in the religious life
the eremitical and the cenobitic; his learning is apparent from his scriptural
commentaries. He died in 1101 of natural causes and is buried in the Church of
St. Stephen.
In the first reading today, we
see the life of the monk reflected as a
continual search for the fuller and deeper meaning of the Word of God, and
knowledge of him who is the very Word of Life. St. Paul encourages the Philippians, all
monks and us to consider as rubbish all
that is not about discovering who Jesus is and how to have a full and mature
relationship with him! – as his servants and co-comforters in the midst of
a twisted and distorted world that we find ourselves in.
In the gospel passage Jesus
tells those who are doing so that it will not be easy, but that the effort will
be greatly rewarded – and the joy that comes from full knowledge will be beyond anything imaginable.
May we, like the monks of old,
spend a great deal of time, directly and indirectly, seeking God and reveling
in each and every little thing we find out about him! Let it make a big
difference in the smallest details of our lives!
Seek
the Lord, while he may be found, call to him while he is near – very near!
No comments:
Post a Comment