In today's commentary Dr
Kania is essentially asking the questions: what, at its core objective
is the whole spiritual quest about? Are we trying to suck up to God demonstrating
how pure and holy we are or are we prepared to get down into the dirt-under-the-fingernails
territory that Jesus walked where we have to rub shoulders with the unclean,
the sinners and possibly some quite detestable people? Or, to put it another
way: are we trying to prove how holy we are OR are we trying to "become
like God" to think and act as God might act?
Jacques Maritain (1882-1973),
known as one of the greatest Thomistic philosophers of the twentieth century,
was so famed during his lifetime, that even Pope Paul VI chose a work
by Maritain to close Vatican II. Yet Maritain had many other friends in
his life, friends who were quite distinct from the acknowledged holiness
of the Pontiff.
In the 1920's, Jean Cocteau (1889-1963),
was a man seemingly entangled within a web of opium, fornication and pederasty.
Cocteau had become immersed in the seamy side of avant-garde France, ever
since that time, when as a teenager he ran away from school and lost his
virginity to a woman over a decade his senior. Hardly had Cocteau graduated
from childhood when his everyday confreres became famed men such as: Stravinsky
(1882-1971), Nijinsky (1890-1950),
Picasso (1881-1973) and Dighailev (1872-1929).
Yet as Cocteau notes in his autobiography, after the death of his 'friend',
Radiguet (1903-1923), he became lost, standing
precariously balanced on the edge of suicide. Unwilling to break out of
his self-imposed casket of grief,
Cocteau wrote that on one occasion he sat near a harbour: "Fishermen
talk to me without seeing the death in which I am enclosed, and I have
the illusion of living". (Cocteau,
1970, p. 105) Yet amidst this darkening vale of tears, Jacques
Maritain, invited Cocteau to his home for a meal.
The friendship between Jacques Maritain and Jean Cocteau
There at the dinner table sat Maritain, the great champion of St. Thomas
Aquinas, together with a man infamously recognized as being a purveyor
and partaker of 'cultured' vice. Soon after this meeting Cocteau in a
letter to Maritain, speaks of Maritain opening his eyes to a new hope
and to God:
"I have lost my seven best friends. Which is to
say that God has had mercy on me seven times without my realizing it.
He lent me a friendship, took it from me, sent me another, and so on.
Seven times He has thrown out his line and pulled it back without catching
me: I let go the bait and fell back, stupidly. Don't for a moment believe
He was killing the young; He was costuming angels. A sickness or a war
afforded them an excuse for undressing
My dear Jacques, there is
no end to your indulgence: it acknowledges that a man exhausted by troubles
and tasks beyond his strength may fall asleep. For a long time sleep was
my refuge. The prospect of waking kept me from sleeping well and dictated
my dreams. In the morning I no longer had the courage to unfold my life.
Reality and dream were superimposed: a bedraggled smear. I would get up,
shave, dress, and let whoever was in my room take me
anywhere".
(Cocteau, 1970, pp. 109 - 110)
Maritain eventually took Cocteau on a 'successful' retreat; yet Cocteau's
'conversion' experience was to be short-lived. Cocteau's subsequent 'fall'
did not however preclude the two men from seeking each other out for dinner,
two decades later, when Cocteau traveled to the United States where Jacques
Maritain was now firmly established as an academic of international repute.
Why?
Yet what inspired Jacques Maritain, a man of such high esteem within
the Catholic Church to risk his standing so as to enter into an intimate
relationship with Cocteau a man who could not offer Maritain anything
but destructive scandal?
Perhaps the answer to this question may lie in the writings of a contemporary
of both Maritain and Cocteau - the Spaniard, Miguel
de Unamuno (1864-1936). In his famous
work, Del Sentimiento Trágico de la
Vida (Eng. The Tragic Sense of
Life), Unamuno attempted to discern the depth of the love of
God for humanity. Unamuno wrote that:
"Consciousness (conscientia) is participated knowledge,
is co-feeling, and co-feeling is compassion. Love personalizes all that
it loves. Only by personalizing it can we fall in love with an idea. And
when love is so great and so vital, so strong and so overflowing, that
it loves everything, then it personalizes everything and discovers the
total All, that the Universe, is also a Person, possessing a Consciousness,
a Consciousness which in its turn suffers, pities, and loves, and therefore
is consciousness. And this Consciousness of the Universe, which love,
personalizing all that it loves, discovers, is what we call God. And thus
the soul pities God and feels itself pitied by Him; loves Him and feels
itself loved by Him, sheltering its misery in the bosom of the eternal
and infinite misery". (Unamuno, 1954, p.
139).
According to Unamuno, we imitate the love of God, by taking pity on all
members of humanity, especially those in whom we could possibly bring
about a transformation, a metanoia, a turning toward God. Every
person, has within them the potential for goodness, for God is the creator
of all and as Scripture teaches us: "The
Lord is not slow about his promise as some count slowness, but is forbearing
toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach
repentance." (2 Peter 3: 9, RSV)
Cocteau was to muse in his autobiography, (indicating the necessity in
his life of a stabilizing influence such as Maritain), of his inherent
and intense struggle with morality: "I am
probably the most notorious poet in France and the most unknown. Sometimes
this saddens me fame intimidates, and I want to arouse only love.
My sadness is the consequence of the mud which covers us, against which
I rebel". (Cocteau, 1970, p. 294)
Shunning self-righteousness for a higher value
It is easy for us to become self-righteous by creating small bastions
of hollow virtue in order to look down from, hurling missives of damnation
on those who do not meet the required bench-mark of goodness that we have
set for ourselves and others to climb. Such however was not the spirit
of St. Dominic (1170-1221),
who stayed under the roof of an Albigensian, nor of St.
Francis (1181-1226) who accepted
the hospitality of a warring Sultan; nor of Maritain who undoubtedly hoped
and prayed for Cocteau; nor of Christ who understood that not all men
are capable of reading the Scriptures in printed format - that some men,
perhaps most men, rely on the Scripture that is published in our hearts
and that is spoken not by the tongue but in the format printed on our
actions. Christ calls Lazarus not from out of the synagogue, but from
out of a tree; He calls Matthew from out behind his counting table; He
calls Mary of Magdala, from an adulterous bed. In each case holiness sought
out those whose hearts had been hardened against the Truth.
In a text often ascribed to St. Albert the Great,
"The Paradise of the Soul",
the author offers his readers a word of warning from Pope
St. Leo (d. 461), a Pontiff who
in his lifetime was an ardent foe of heresy, but who was nonetheless undaunted
about meeting face to face with Attila the
Hun (406-453): "None
of us is so perfect or holy but he may be still more perfect and more
holy
Then we begin to be in danger of growing worse, when we cease
to desire to grow better". (St. Albert
the Great, 1920, pp. 86 - 87)
The author continues his discourse, by telling the teacher of theology
to have patience with all who need instruction, even those who are quite
content in their heresy. As the author understands the role of the teacher
one has to be perfectly liberal, meaning not that one has no concern
for upholding Church dogma, but that one is not blinkered by prejudice
to the point that one only seeks to preach the Word of God to the converted.
He explains:
"True and perfect liberality is when anyone cheerfully
administers temporal relief to all that are in need according to his power;
yea, also, being required, he willingly communicates spiritual goods to
all those who want them, in shriving, preaching, in giving counsel and
instruction. Nor is he ready only to assist those who desire such things,
but also even to those who do not desire or care for his instruction and
preaching he ministers, according to the counsel of the Apostle, opportunely
and importunely. Yea, to the unwilling and to those who know nothing of
it he communicates prayers, sighs, and tears before God. Nor is the truly
liberal satisfied with this, unless, moreover, he wholly spend himself
in study, meditation, and other holy work continually for the salvation
of his neighbours". (St. Albert the Great,
1920, p. 90)
That Maritain had had a friendship with Cocteau, should thus not astonish
us. The Dominican mystic, Johannes Tauler
also provides us with an interesting gloss about the mature spiritual
life: "True Friends of God are active in
the world as models of the oneness of love of God and love of neighbor.
In V 76 he speaks of "a great Friend of God and wonderfully holy
man" who desired the kingdom of heaven more for his neighbor than
for himself. He exclaims - "This is what I call love" (dis hies
ich mine [410.31]). While the Friends of God should avoid those who might
tempt them to sin, they are not meant to separate from the world'".
(McGinn, 2005, p. 412)
The true spiritual person is thus he or she who can be immersed in the
world, but not of it; who can speak to others, even the greatest of sinners
- but not be drawn into their iniquity. Such a spiritual life, is a difficult
and precarious road - but it is also the path of the greatest Saints
demanding both a great depth of contemplation and creative action.
We must not become so ethereal
that we have no salvific value to others
In sum, what matters is that each of us, like Maritain, be careful not
to assume that the Christian life is one of seeking personal salvation
in a vacuum, thus rejecting the responsibility one owes God of offering
the message of salvation to those with whom we come in contact. We must
not become so ethereal that we have no salvific value to others; convincing
ourselves that we are taken from an alpine spring and that others are
drawn but from sullied, muddied water and that the two can never mix.
By so doing we reject our apostolate and withdraw the opportunity
of speaking the Gospel to others in the everyday and sometimes mundane
course of living.
How can we presume, all of us drawing our natures from the same spring,
that any one of us, is inherently superior to the other? The Dominican
theologian Chenu reminds us in his
study, Aquinas and His Role in Theology,
that: "Contemplation has an absolute value
as the object of full human delight, beyond questions of morality and
even in the midst of the sordid reality of sin. Remember to whom Christ
announces the need for 'worship in spirit and in truth' he speaks
to the much-married Samaritan woman". (Chenu, 2002, 43).
All we can hope for is that God's grace will make the draught that constitutes
our lives purer and that we are able to share this purity with
others to slake their thirst; as we have our own. For Christ freely
offers salvation to all who are prepared to listen, and he can take, with
our acquiescence, the muddiest of all waters and turn this into the most
exquisite of wines. But who will be able to comprehend the Gospel message
that Christ offers if no one chooses to offer to his thirsty neighbour
the Water of Life, by speaking to his neighbour in a language that is:
gentle, open, lucid and wise; a language that must, in the words of John
Henry Newman (1801-1890), be able
to captivate "restless imaginations and
wild intellects, as well as to touch
susceptible hearts".

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Andrew
Thomas Kania is a visiting scholar at Oxford University where
he is completing a book on Dag Hammerskold. He has taken 12 months
leave of absence from his position as Director of Spirituality at
Aquinas College, Manning in Western Australia to complete this book.
Prior to this appointment at Aquinas Dr. Kania was a lecturer for
the School of Religious Education at the University of Notre Dame
Australia as well as for the Catholic Institute of Western Australia
at Edith Cowan and Curtin Universities. Dr. Kania belongs to the
Ukrainian Church and is interested in ecumenical issues as well
as contemporary problems facing religious educators.
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©2007
Dr Andrew Thomas Kania
[Andrew Kania's Archive]
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