
Commencement 2000
Baccalaureate Homily
The Very Reverend Hugh C. Barbour, O. Praem., S.T.L, Ph.D.
Fr. Barbour, O. Praem. is the Prior of St. Michaels
Abbey in Orange, California. Following is the Baccalaureate
Homily he gave for the Mass of the Holy Spirit as part of
Commencement Ceremonies on June 10, 2000:
Down in adoration falling
Lo! the sacred Host we hail,
Lo! oer ancient forms departing
Newer rites of grace prevail;
Faith for all defects supplying,
Where the feeble senses fail.
The words of a hymn most familiar to us is the Tantum
Ergo one which surely, a number of times, if not
countless times, you have sung or heard sung even here
the words of the Angelic Doctor. Faith for all defects supplying,
Where the feeble senses fail.
When St. Thomas was a little boy, a very little boy, he was
in bed with his little sister in a cradle by a window. A flash
of lightning entered the room and took her life and saved
his, as he startled and moved, obviously from such a tremendous,
sudden, frightening object. Ever after, in his life, when
there was a thunderstorm, or a tempest, St. Thomas would cross
himself, or he might even lay his head on the table of the
altar if he was in the church, and he would repeat over and
over, God has become man. God has died and has risen.
Faith for all defects supplying, Where the feeble senses fail.
We know why it is that God revealed to us truths that exceed
the capacity of our human reason, our unaided human reason.
In addition to truths which He revealed on account of our
fallen state, which we could have come to know on our own,
He revealed truths which exceed our understanding, that utterly
surpass the state of this present life. Why did He do so?
Well, the first answer is very simple and serene and makes
eminent good sense from our perspective, as well as, of course,
from Gods. If we were only in this life to know such
things as can be known by our unaided human powers, then we
might be led to think that that good, that end which God has
established for us for the perfection of our nature and for
our beatitude, would be something proportionate to the things
which we find in this world.
And so, God revealed, as St. Thomas teaches us in the fifth
chapter of the first book of his Summa against the Pagans,
against the Gentiles. He says that in order that we might
desire and tend with zeal towards an object that utterly exceeds
the state of this present life, God revealed to us truths
which we cannot know on our own indeed, truths so profound
that we cannot even discover with our human mind the inner
reason for these truths, their plausibility seen from within
the way we know things of science, of human science.
God revealed Himself to us so that we might desire Him as
He really is, as one of whom the Apostle speaks when he says,
Eye has not seen, nor has ear heard, nor has it entered
into the heart of anyone what God has prepared for those who
love Him that is, for those who desire Him and
tend towards Him with zeal, knowing that what He is and what
He holds in store for us, utterly exceeds all that we could
ever experience or come to know or learn by our own discovery
or learn from another.
But, this reason, as helpful as it is and certainly as enlightening
as it is, as we pursue studies which are academic and
surely all of the students here, both those graduating and
those who still have a ways to go, recognize that they can
learn a great deal from the fact that everything that they
learn which is good and true and beautiful, that everything
which is worth striving for doesnt even approach the
majesty, the sublimity, and the capacity to satisfy the divine
mysteries once seen face to face but this reason is
a reason for revelation which would have been the case even
had we never fallen, even had our first parents never
for them and for us placed our human nature universally
in such a sorry state that we no longer live forever, that
we no longer know and penetrate the secrets of nature by particular
gifts given by God; that we no longer have that inner harmony
and integrity between our understanding and our passions because
of the Fall lost, lost to us.
Even had there been no Fall, there would have been revelations
of truths that exceed human reason. For God, being very good
indeed, always intended these things for our benefit, that
we might see Him as He really is. But given our fallen nature,
revelation takes on an even more important (from a practical
point of view), even more urgent and necessary, crucially
necessary aspect. For, I put it to you today, that as you
have discovered in the past, so you will know even more in
the future, the principal difficulty, challenge, and, of course,
occupation of our life is not to come to know the things we
can know, or even to come to know them very well, but to overcome
ourselves the three-fold concupiscence: the concupiscence
of the flesh, of the eyes, and of the pride of life. It is
these things against which we must struggle our whole life
through.
And this is really and truly where the victory is to be won.
For although it is necessary that we know in order to desire,
it is not enough for us poor fallen creatures, sons and daughters
of Eve. There has to be a healing and saving grace that lifts
us up from our state and gives us the victory over our passions.
Our senses, which are our friends, the friends of our nature
through which we receive all that we know in some way or another,
become the source of disturbances of memories, imaginations,
impressions, the source of passions which will trouble us
all our life long.
We are not so fortunate as St. Thomas to have had so innocent
a life that the only passion we read of him struggling against
was a perfectly understandable passion, the remembrance and
the cognitive awareness of judgment of an experience which
certainly exceeded the limits of human nature exceeded
the capacities of toleration of a little childs intellect
and memory. His struggle was one against a fear long remembered.
But where did he find the consolation for this struggle?
In the dogmas of the faith there is a perfect, pure, pristine
reason in his reaction to his fear of thunder and lightening
a fear so much like that of the smallest child and
yet existing in the wisest, most angelic, most universally
sound of human minds and hearts. God has become man.
God has died. God has risen from the dead. This was
the consolation for the defect of his senses, for that disorder
in his passions, in his memory.
The Christian life is a battle. Job said it and it is so
true. Our life is a warfare, and a spiritual one, for the
Apostle tells us that we are not warring just against flesh
and blood, our own inner difficulties, but also those sources
of temptation which transcend our own selves and which are
malicious. But first of all, if the battle is to be won, it
has to be won by our steadfast profession of faith in the
face of all that would keep us from our final goal. All that
we know will be of no avail if we do not overcome ourselves.
The great St. Augustine, the perfect example of this, understood
that fact so well. And his conversion to the one and Catholic
faith was not one only of his mind, but a conversion of his
heart and of his sensibility. The truths of our faith, those
which are most profound, provide our understanding but also
our passions with the remedy which can lead us to eternal
life and everlasting happiness and satisfaction in a supreme
good. For it is the Cross, after all, which St. Thomas tells
us, is the most difficult of the mysteries of faith
difficult, that is for our understanding that God could
take upon Himself a human nature and endure every sort of
suffering for our salvation this is a mystery beyond
our comprehension.
And yet, in it is found the remedy for our every ill
the humbling of our mind with that wisdom which is foolishness
to the world; and the healing of all of our faculties through
Our Lords five precious Wounds, His Heart open to both
give and to receive that which His creatures need and that
which they long to return to Him. Someday, sooner or later,
maybe sooner for some, later for others, we will finally reach
eternal life by the grace of perseverance. We will reach that
day on which we will be judged according to our works by the
merciful eyes of God.
St. Thomas reached that day in an extraordinary way. For on
St. Nicholas Day, in the middle of the 13th century, in the
chapel of St. Nicholas, where St. Thomas said Mass every day
in Naples, that great Saint, that giver of gifts to children,
gave through his intercession, that gift which is of all gifts,
the greatest; not just the good, but the supreme good. And
after St. Thomas saw that, as he was celebrating the mysteries
of the Passion in sacrament, he said, In comparison
to what I have seen, all that I have written appears to be
but straw. I can write no more. And he put his writing
utensils away.
Someday those feeble senses, defective with all their effects,
will be enlightened, healed, lifted up, risen, glorified and
will share in the redundance of that vision which is complete
and perfect happiness. Our life after college, during, before,
the whole span of it, is ordered toward this and this alone,
if we would be truly wise. So let us resolve today to seek
those things which do not pass away in whatever it is that
we do and to seek above all to find in the faith, in
the mysteries of the faith, the consolation, the power, the
healing, the solution to all of our human weaknesses, which,
I can assure you, you have only begun to appreciate.
That verse, which I read at the beginning, precedes the conclusion
of that hymn the conclusion which promises us Eternal
Life in the vision of the Blessed Trinity. This is the point
of todays celebration. And indeed, as I love to repeat
from time to time, all of us here will understand and see
one day, this day, in the light of an eternal day and will
recall in the providential judgments of God the words that
were spoken and the inspirations given, those graces actual
and efficacious. And so, in view of that happy day when we
will recall to our great benefit and joy, God willing and
with our cooperation, what we do here today, let us set our
hearts wholly on the truths of the faith that St. Thomas expounded
so well but which, by Gods mercy, his own experience
superseded so utterly that he could work no more.
Ill conclude with some words of a disciple of St. Thomas,
one who, also like him, shared abundantly in the understanding,
penetration, enjoyment of the mysteries of faith and who knew
what it was to overcome the obstacles of the senses in order
to receive a higher light. St. John of the Cross writes this.
And these words could be in fact a profession of faith, a
concrete one, for each one of our graduates to be a
statement of what is truest about life and a statement about
all of lifes experiences in the light of those truths
which utterly exceed anything of which we have had experience
or will experience. St. John of the Cross writes this: Mine
are the heavens and mine the earth. Mine are the people, the
righteous are mine, and mine are the sinners. The angels are
mine, and the Mother of God is mine. And God Himself is mine
and for me. For Christ is mine and all for me. What do you
ask for, what do you seek, my soul? All this is yours and
it is all for you.
Amen.
-- Qtrly Newsletter, Summer 2000
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