Wednesday, 25 June 2014

TEACHING THEOLOGY WITHOUT TEACHING PRAYER A WASTE OF TIME (First published in 'NZ Catholic' June 15)


 ‘Souls who do not practise prayer are like people paralyzed or cripped; even though they have hands and feet they cannot give orders to these hands and feet.’ - ‘This turning away from one’s interior life is one of earth’s greatest tragedies.’

In the wake of our bishops’ statement on Catholic schools, these words from Teresa of Avila together with Kieran Kavanagh OCD’s following comment (The Interior Castle, Study Edition) might usefully be read in reference to our teachers, as to everyone. Some may discount Teresa’s title, Doctor of the Church, but this 16th century mystic is conceded to be as Fr Kavanagh says, ‘one of the most profound spiritual teachers in the history of Christianity, and a vivid witness to divine realities’ (which obviously aren’t seen by some).

What are we doing to actuate ‘the beauty and dignity of the human person’ (ibid) for our beleaguered teachers? With both parents in many families forced to work, time and money poor, stressed in ways previously unheard of, kids in Catholic classrooms - although not as much as secular schools, thank God – constantly present new behavioural problems for teachers to solve, while precious teaching time  is appropriated to ‘assessment’: soul-destroying paperwork.

‘All the good works a soul might do while in mortal sin are fruitless … they cannot be pleasing in (God’s) sight’ (ibid). Hmmm. Should we take that seriously? Yes. No matter how well we do what we do, teaching preaching or otherwise, while serious sin goes unconfessed and unforgiven, fundamentally our work is no good to anyone.

 ‘These crippled souls … are quite unfortunate and in serious danger ... Those who have completely neglected prayer and the interior life can no longer do anything to help themselves change, they need help from the Lord himself’ (ibid).

There are many, many prayerful - dare I say holy - teachers in Catholic schools, but as authoritative voices are raised requesting theological qualifications for R E teachers, Teresa’s 16th century advice is very contemporary. Theology’s no use without the Holy Spirit’s enlightenment. Like the rest of us, teachers need to learn  prayer - which ‘consists not in thinking much’ (theology) ‘but in loving much’ (generous self-surrender to God and community).

Oh dear. That’s going to take time, and who’s got any of that? Not teachers. But it’s precisely that lack of time and knowledge of prayer’s benefits which the evil one manipulates to his fiendish ends and our sticky ones. We’re not likely to gamble even ten minutes a day on prayer until we’re convinced of the slow but sure results.

Joy. Trust in God. Gradual reconstruction of lifestyle and priorities. Living lovingly in community. Freedom from regrets, fear, worries about family, health, money, the environment, terrorism, world poverty or other people’s opinions (except for fear of alienating them from God). Concerns yes, worries no. No fear of earthquakes!

Living in the Divine Will. Like a leaf borne on the current of a river towards the weir which is union with Christ.

 

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