Lecio Divina November
Pope's Prayer Intentions
Universal: Dialogue - That we may be open to personal encounter and dialogue with all, even those whose convictions differ from our own.
Evangelization: Pastors - That pastors of the Church, with profound love for their flocks, may accompany them and enliven their hope.
Lectio Divina November - Noviembre - Novembre 2015
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Justice and Peace - Questionare

Justice, peace and integrity of creation are constitutive issues in the proclamation of the Kingdom of God. Contemplation prepares us individually and communally to stand as prophets in the world. The General Commission of JPIC has been convened to support us in our prophetic witness in the midst of creation.
In order to develop a working paper (Instrumentum laboris) for the forthcoming JPIC Carmelite Family Congress in July 2017, the Commission sends this questionnaire as an initial step in an overall project of the whole Carmelite Family.
The Commission calls upon everyone to pray, reflect and respond to this questionnaire. Both individuals and communities are encouraged to respond.
If you refer to respond by mail, please send to
The Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation Commission
Curia Generalizia dei Carmelitani
Via Giovanni Lanza, 138
00184 Roma (ITALIA)
Rationale Statement of the Carmelite Commission For Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation
Rome, 25th September 2015
Prot.153/2015
Rationale Statement of the Carmelite Commission For Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation
We, the members drawn from the various branches of the Carmelite Family to constitute the Commission for Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation of the Carmelite Order, met for our inaugural meeting at the Curia Generalizia, Roma, from 11-15 September 2014.
Our deliberations, sharing and dialogue from our diverse and rich contextual experiences were frank and sincere. We committed ourselves for the duration of this sessennium (2013-2019), to focus on helping Carmelite brothers and sisters in sensitizing, animating and participating in the promotion of Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation throughout the Carmelite Family. We drew up our strategic plan which is an instrument for us to help our communities and especially those working in the ministry of Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation to deepen their reflection, promote advocacy of pertinent issues and motivate each other to appropriate context-based action.
We recognize that action on behalf of justice and participation in the transformation of the world is a constitutive dimension of preaching the Gospel.[1] The whole ministry of Jesus and his return to the Father can be seen as geared towards the building up of the Kingdom of God - through proclamation, attitude and action - which is essentially a reign of justice and truth, holiness and peace, grace, unity and love. Pope Francis has stressed that, ‘Each individual Christian and every community is called to be an instrument of God for the liberation and promotion of the poor, and for enabling them to be fully a part of society’ and that ‘all of us, as Christians, are called to watch over and protect the fragile world in which we live, and all its peoples’[2]
We note that, we, Carmelites from our inception, inspired by Mary in her welcome and contemplative attitude towards the Word, and the Prophet Elijah in his zeal for and living in the presence of the Lord, as people of prayer and community are also people sensitive to the needs of those around us true to our Mendicant roots. In the post-Vatican II era, we recognize that a lot of reflection took place at such fora as the Council of Provinces and General Congregation and General Chapters. One of the most significant development has been an openness to justice and peace issues. For example, the Order has reflected on issues of poverty and our need to identify with the poor: In the Midst of the People[3], A Return to the Sources[4], Called to Account by the Poor[5]. We recognize that our world has become more complex and grave challenges have arisen that threaten the very existence of creation. Some of those challenges include loss of biodiversity, which is currently a thousand times higher than natural extinction rate[6]; energy depletion, which means that we are consuming more than we need and the current possibility for the earth to recover[7]; climate change, which is currently affecting millions of people worldwide through extended droughts in some areas and sea level rise and floods in other areas[8]; and global population growth with a distinctive pattern of unequal affluence, deeply interconnected with the previous issues[9]. We propose that we Carmelites, rooted in our 800 year-old tradition of brotherhood, of intimacy with the Lord God under the contemplative example of Mary and the zealous drive of the Prophet Elijah, renew, rekindle and promote the life-giving values of the Kingdom of God through deeds, advocacy and action.
There are many laudable causes for us to promote but these seem to us to be pressing in the context of our world situation of spiritual apathy, globalization of inequality, injustice, materialist consumerism and growing religious fundamentalism and intolerance. We commit ourselves to promoting, advocating for, and working to change for the better in our localities, the lives of real people in the following areas: human rights from conception to the tomb; community building, understanding and tolerance; promotion of Kingdom values and Carmelite spirituality with special emphasis on right relationship with others and the environment; awareness of environmental change through advocacy and helping communities to respond positively to this.
To help us to have an impression of the work Carmelites are doing in the area of Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation, we wish to send a questionnaire to all our Provinces, Commissariats and Delegations. The questionnaire is a tool to help us plan for the production of the Carmelite Order’s Handbook on the animation of Justice, Peace and Integrity on Creation. The Carmelite Order has a strong history of meaningful adaptation to changing circumstances so as to be an effective player and contributor to issues. In the face of our contemporary world challenges, may we rise to offer our modest assistance to the world from the Carmelite tradition of respecting all in community, of fostering intimacy with God to be expressed in reaching out in service of the Church and the world. As the 2013 General Chapter Final Statement says: ‘People will be drawn to Christ when they notice our gospel based lives of simplicity, solidarity with the marginalized, celebration of unity in diversity, and the creation of safe environments for the children, teens and adults to whom we minister’[10]. The world needs our faith-based approach to ministry as one avenue of establishing right relationships with God, other human beings and all creation!
- The Carmelite Commission for Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation (2013-2019)
[1] Synod of Bishops, Justice in the World, 1971.
[2] Pope Francis, Evangelii Gaudium, Apostolic Exhortation on the Proclamation of the Gospel in Today’s World, Roma: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, nos. 187, 216.
[3] Third Council of Provinces, In the Midst of the People: Small Religious Commuinities and Basic-Communities, Dublin, 1975, in Kevin Mark, O.Carm., ed. Towards Prophetic Brotherhood: Documents of the Carmelite Ordr 1972-1982, Melbourne: The Carmelite Centre, 1984, pp. 43-55
[4] Fifth Council of Provinces, A Return to the Sources: An Examination of the Biblical Significance of Mary and Elijah, 1979, in Kevin Mark, Ibid., pp. 68-81
[5] Order of Carmelites General Congregation, Called to Account by the Poor, 1980, in K.Mark, Ibid.,pp. 81-96
[6] United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP). Cf. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, Montreal (2010). (http://www.iucn.org).
[7] Cf. World Watch Institute, Green Economy Program, (http://www.worldwatch.org/programs/golbal_economy)
[8] Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), Fifth Assessment Report 2013. (http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/wg1).
[9] Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (http://www.fao.org)
[10] ‘A Word of Hope and Salvation (Const. 24)’, in Consilium Generale O.Carm., Global Plan of the General Council 2013-2019, Roma: Edizioni Carmelitane, 20014, pp.8-12, no. 4f.
Justic and Peace - Questionare
Justice, peace and integrity of creation are constitutive issues in the proclamation of the Kingdom of God. Contemplation prepares us individually and communally to stand as prophets in the world. The General Commission of JPIC has been convened to support us in our prophetic witness in the midst of creation.
In order to develop a working paper (Instrumentum laboris) for the forthcoming JPIC Carmelite Family Congress in July 2017, the Commission sends this questionnaire as an initial step in an overall project of the whole Carmelite Family.
The Commission calls upon everyone to pray, reflect and respond to this questionnaire. Both individuals and communities are encouraged to respond.
Presentation of the Prior General
Rome, 25th September 2015
Prot.153/2015
RE: Presentation of the Prior General
Dear Brother/Sister,
On May 24, 2015, Feast of Pentecost, Pope Francisco published his encyclical letter Laudato Si, in which the Pope made a solemn appeal to the Church and all humanity to "protect our common home", and invited us all to develop a deep sensitivity to human and integral ecology, based on the values of justice and peace. Early in his encyclical, the Pope makes a brief tour of the magisterium of recent popes on this matter, and shows how this sensitivity has increasingly developed within the Church.
We also, Carmelites, have come a long way in this direction and along the last decades we have published several important documents on this topic. We have organized a number of international conferences and congresses; we have created several NGOs that, both at local and national level, as well as at international level, have developed aid plans, projects, awareness campaigns, etc.; and, perhaps most importantly, we have developed a sensitivity to these values (justice, peace, integrity of creation) that, starting from our charism, could be meaningful, useful and fruitful for the church and the world today. With great humility, but also with a healthy pride, I can say that many brothers and sisters (religious, lay people and the Carmelite family in general) have carried out a serious and generous work in this area.
For several decades now, the International Commission for Justice and Peace has been established in our Order, and some years ago it was renamed "Commission for Justice and Peace and the Integrity of Creation" (JPIC). Well, this commission has prepared a questionnaire that will be useful for us to evaluate the importance of these issues in our Carmelite life (at a personal, community or provincial level). It will also help us keep walking along this direction and respond to the challenge that the Pope has given us all. I ask you to take it and use it when possible. I hope it will be useful for your discernment.
I appreciate this service made by Fr. Mutizamhepo Conrad, O.Carm., and the members of the commission. May it be a good way for us to not relax on this issue and to continue being involved in it as believers, as baptized and as Carmelites. As does the Pope, also we put this mission into the hands of Our Lady and we ask her to caring "with maternal affection and pain for this wounded world" (Laudato si, n. 241).
Fraternally in Carmel,
Fernando Millán Romeral, O.Carm.
Prior General
Letter of Invitation to participate in Carmelite JPIC Questionnaire
Rome, 25th September 2015
Prot.153/2015
RE: Letter of Invitation to participate in Carmelite JPIC Questionnaire
Dear Brother/ Sister,
The Carmelite General Commission for Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation (JPIC), was constituted by the General Council after the General Chapter of 2013. The members of the Commission are drawn from various regions of the Order and some representatives of the Carmelite Family. It was established ‘to sensitize, animate, participate in the promotion of the Carmelites’ preferential attention to the welfare of little ones of history, and involvement in JPIC issues in particular contexts’ (Global Pan, p.35). In pursuit of this goal, the members of the Commission are planning for an all Carmelite Family JPIC Congress during July 2017.
In preparation for this Congress, the Commission is seeking your interest and participation in the upcoming activities, namely:
- Inviting all members of the Carmelite Family to participate in a questionnaire survey on what ministries Carmelites are actually involved in;
- Inviting members to take time and respond to the questionnaire individually or communally;
- collection of responses and analysis by the JPIC Commission members;
- Production of a working paper/ document synthesizing responses which will be the basis for the discussions at the Congress;
- Culminating in an All Carmelite Family JPIC Congress during July 2017
- Production of a Carmelite JPIC handbook.
The questionnaire can be responded to both electronically on the following email address: Esta dirección de correo electrónico está siendo protegida contra los robots de spam. Necesita tener JavaScript habilitado para poder verlo. or posted to
The Carmelite Commission for Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation
Curia Generalizia Dei Carmelitani;
Via Giovanni Lanza, 138,
00184 Roma, Italia.
We invite Carmelites with access to internet to download the questionnaire and distribute the hard copies to others. We hope you will be as interested in this exercise as we are.
May the fiery prophet Elijah who lived in the presence of the living God and responded to the needs of the people of his time inspire you to do the same in our time. May Mary of Nazareth, the woman of faith and contemplation encourage you to ponder on the mystery of Christ and his relevance in the face of the daunting social and environmental challenges of the twenty-first century.
God bless you and renew you in your pursuit of the Carmelite vocation and charism in its various expressions as friar, sister, nun and lay faithful.
Yours fraternally in Carmel,
Conrad Mutizamhepo, O.Carm
General Councillor and Praeses of Carmelite Commission for JPIC
Lay Carmel in Malta: The Third Order
Georgina Linwood
The Carmelites in Malta
The Carmelite Order arrived in Malta from Sicily in 1418. The friars’ first home was at Lunzjata, which is located in Rabat, and afterwards the brothers went to live in Mdina. In the following centuries the Carmelites spread out along the island. Today there are four parishes, a school run by the Carmelites, religious vocations teams, Third Orders and groups following Carmelite spirituality.
The Third Order and Lay Carmelites
The Carmelite Third Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel is formed of lay members who, in a response to a call from God, promise to live the Gospel in the spirit of the Carmelite charism. The Third or Secular Order comprises both lay people and secular clergy. In the charism of Carmel they find a spiritual home which animates their own spiritual life and their mission in the Church and in the World. Among the Third Order in Malta we find a bishop, Rt Rev. Charles Scicluna, and a Saint – Gorg (George) Preca. Altogether we have more than five thousand members, and nineteen branches, including four based in Carmelite parishes. These communities welcome men and women, young people of various ages, and people from different social backgrounds. They meet to pray together, and follow a Carmelite-based programme of spiritual formation.
Each Third Order community has a council and its spiritual needs are taken care of by a Carmelite priest. Each group meets about once a month to discuss spirituality, organise Eucharistic adoration, retreats, sermons, and other spiritual and social activities.
The National Council of the Carmelite Third Order in Malta was founded on June 18th, 2011. The Council meets to discuss and plan activities both spiritual and social. The Council felt the need to incorporate all members of the Third Order in Malta, and plan a programme of spiritual formation that can reach out to every tertiary. This brings Lay Carmelites together, giving direction and community formation according to the Carmelite Rule of Saint Albert and a new charter for Lay Carmel in Malta.
In 2003 the Carmelite Order issued a new Charter (Rule/Constitutions) for the Third Order. In 2009 the Maltese Carmelite Family discussed the situations of the Third Order in Malta and concluded that steps were needed to enact the Charter. The purpose of the document is to give directions on spiritual and community formation, so that each member follows the Rule and Constitutions of the Order and thereby grows in living Carmelite spirituality. The Third Order National Council was formed by the Maltese Prior Provincial to help realise this goal.
The National Council works as a team together with the friars’ Delegate for the Third Order, Fr Alex Scerri, O.Carm. Once a year the Council organises a National Congress, and a National Retreat that brings all Lay Carmelites together. The Council is now planning retreats, seminars and workshops on a province-wide level.
Lay and Third Order Carmelite Workshops
In Malta there are communities of the Carmelite Third Order as well as other groups of lay people inspired by the spirituality of Carmel. A team has been brought together to analyse the reality of these groups, and start planning workshops among them. These workshops will discuss: the Rule of Saint Albert and the Charter/Constitutions of the Third Order; ways to enrich catechesis and spiritual formation; the meaning of our consecration to the Lord; the teachings of the Carmelite mystics and saints. The team working on this is comprised of the Prior Provincial (Fr Alexander Vella, O.Carm.), the Delegate for the Third Order (Fr Alex Scerri, O.Carm.), the Delegate for Other Lay Carmelite Groups (Fr Charlò Camilleri, O.Carm.), other Carmelite friars, and three members of the Third Order National Council.
Deus Caritas Est
In the last four years a new group of Lay Carmelites has been formed in Malta. The group is called Deus Caritas Est (God is Love). The group welcomes women of all ages and situations in life. They meet on a regular basis for Mass, seminars of spiritual formation, and Adoration. The core group meets every week to practice Lectio Divina meditation on the Bible, praying and interceding for priests and for families. A few members of this community have also become members of the Third Order and have formed a distinct community. One of the activities of Deus Caritas Est is a project with children; through crafts and creative workshops Lay Carmel evangelises young people.
Celebrated Carmelite Figures in Malta
In Malta we are fortunate to have some inspiring figures in the Carmelite Family. Saint Gorg Preca (1880-1962) was a diocesan priest who founded The Society of Christian Doctrine. He was also a member of the Carmelite Third Order, and was keen that everyone should wear the Carmelite Brown Scapular. He used to love writing, and his many books contain a wealth of knowledge about spiritual formation. Another inspiring Carmelite was Fr Avertan Fenech, O.Carm. He was a very humble and simple friar who loved God. At this moment the Order is working towards his beatification. Another important Carmelite from Malta was Fr Anastasio Cuschieri, O.Carm. (1876-1962). He was a friar, senator, philosophy professor and author. He was twice elected Prior Provincial of the Carmelites. He is known as ‘The Virgin Mary’s Poet’ because most of his poems are about Our Lady.
Iconization of Titus Brandsma
Kees Waaijman, O.Carm.,
Titus Brandsma was born in 1881 in Oegeklooster (Friesland, The Netherlands). In 1898 he entered the Carmelite Order at Boxmeer (Brabant). After his training for the priesthood and his study of philosophy and sociology in Rome, he taught philosophy at the Carmelite school in Oss (Brabant). From the establishment of the Catholic University at Nijmegen in 1923, he served as its professor of philosophy and the history of mysticism. From 1935 on he was the spiritual advisor of the Roman Catholic Society of Journalists. In 1941 he made a round trip to visit the directors and chief editors of Catholic newspapers in The Netherlands to persuade them to refuse the advertisements of the Dutch Nazi Party (NSB) which the German occupation authorities forced them to place. This trip was viewed as an act of resistance. In 1942 Titus Brandsma was arrested and imprisoned (in Arnhem, Scheveningen, Amersfoort, and Kleve) and finally transported to the concentration camp in Dachau. On July 26, 1942, he died there as a result of a lethal injection. Although the historical facts concerning Titus Brandsma are in large part well-established and witnesses are still alive today who knew him personally, the iconization around him is already highly diverse.
Hero of the resistance and martyr
In the last years of the war (1942-1945) and the early post-war years, Titus Brandsma was primarily viewed as a hero of the resistance.[1] This image was established by his writings from prison: My cell, the Daily Schedule of a Prisoner, and Final Piece. His biographer, H.W.F. Aukes, in the first edition of his biography (1947), also highlights the last year of Titus’s life.
Journalist
Titus Brandsma’s resistance culminated in his round trip to the offices of the Catholic daily press in 1941. This made him a fighter for the freedom of the press and freedom of speech, an aspect that was strongly profiled by José Alzin in his biography: That Dangerous Little Monk.[2] The same occurs in the brochures of Houle and Shortis.[3] Most outspoken is the biography of Vallaine, A Journalist-Martyr: Father Titus Brandsma.[4] On the occasion of his beatification this image of the martyred journalist was the focus of much attention. During the beatification a painted design for a stained-glass window by Martini hung in the ‘gallery of Bernini’, on which Brandsma is depicted with a goose feather in his right hand. In the homily of John Paul II, too, the journalist was highlighted:
Pater Titus’s heart could not remain indifferent to the many brothers working outside of academic institutions, who might also feel the need for a word of clarification. To them he became a journalist.[5]
The Union of Catholic Journalists (UCSI) held a press conference: “In Titus Brandsma we find a symbol and model of a reliable and meaningful approach to our profession”.[6]
Church and Culture
Within the framework of the Catholic emancipation movement, Titus Brandsma was intensely interested in the affairs of Church and culture. He took initiatives on behalf of the Organization of Catholic Education, was one of the founders of the Catholic University of Nijmegen, devoted himself to the cause of the Catholic press, exerted himself for the preservation of Frisian culture, was involved in ecumenical action vis-à-vis the Christian East, sympathized with the peace movement and the protection of animals. This activity was not purely institutional. Culture, for Brandsma, was
a dialogue concerning the problems of people, listening to and differentiating between the phenomena which touch the masses, attention to art and the environment, the restoration of folk traditions and popular piety that is despised by intellectuals, the defence of minorities and oppressed cultures (those of Friesland, Armenia, and the Jews), positive appreciation for the mass media as a new vehicle for Christian values, the elementary importance of Christian education and of missionary activities.[7]
The Frisian
His ardent advocacy of the Frisian cause was linked, in Brandsma’s case, with his origins. It is not surprising, therefore, that Frisians view Titus Brandsma as an “intrepid example of Frisian fidelity and rectitude.”[8] The pope supported their view:
The moral strength which the blessed Titus Brandsma exhibited in his many and varied activities, and in the end in his way of the cross and death, was definitely inherent in his nature, his Frisian character, marked as it was by this firm adherence to principle, loyalty, soundness, and honesty.[9]
The mystical dimension
In his rewritten biography of 1961, Aukes shifts the emphasis to Titus Brandsma’s experience of God. Beginning in the decade of the sixties we see this shift to the spiritual dimension of his life in several publications.[10] On the basis of various testimonies people have prominently featured[11] the image of Titus Brandsma as “a mystic positioned squarely in the fullness of life”.[12] His writings, too, prove to be inwardly conditioned by this mystical dimension.[13] The symposium which the Titus Brandsma Institute conducted on the occasion of Titus’s beatification in 1985, bore the title: Titus Brandsma and mysticism.[14] Otger Steggink sees more than a professor in Titus Brandsma:
His studies and teaching in spirituality and mysticism, like those in the branches of philosophy, all bore the marks of his personal spiritual experience. (…) Therefore we who are gathered here today wish to view his professoriate in the light of his spiritual and mystical personality, since in the person of Titus Brandsma, the academic cannot be separated from the mystic.[15]
The saint
One who reads through the loose-leaf folder with prayer intentions[16] in the Titus Brandsma Memorial Chapel in Nijmegen is struck by the immense confidence people have in Titus Brandsma. His help is invoked in connection with illness and serious operations, family problems, and a long journey, crises in relationships and before examinations, for work and for peace. The confidence to which this devotion attests discloses in Titus Brandsma a saint who lived a life that was spontaneously good: Titus at ‘the community centre for Social Assistance’; Titus in search of a scholarship for a needy student; seeking employment for a graduate; arguing for the appointment of a female classics teacher at a training school for priests; concerning himself with the fate of the widow of a musician; Titus in search of a home for an Armenian refugee without parents. The image of a saint is further substantiated by the testimonies of colleagues: ‘he was cordially and universally loved by the families of colleagues’ (Rogier); someone who ‘gave much because he loved much’ (Van Ginneken); a person ‘who displayed an almost interminable range of activity for the common good’ (Sassen). His fellow brothers too testify to a goodness that sprang from a disinterested compassion for the other,[17] a disinterestedness which simply continued in prison.[18]
Kees Waaijman, O.Carm., is the author of Spirituality, Forms-Foundations-Methods. This article can be found on p. 614-617. Produced here with permission of the author.
[1] L. de Jong, Het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden in de Tweede Wereldoorlog 5. ‘s Gravenhage 1961, 109-116.
[2] J. Alzin, Ce petit moine dangereux. Paris 1954.
[3] A. House, Titus Brandsma. Martyr. Aylesford 1958; J. Shortis, Father Brandsma. Carmelite, Educator, Journalist, Nazivictim. Melbourne 1956.
[4] F. Vallaine, Un giornalista martire. Padre Tito Brandsma. Milano 1985.
[5] Cited in J. Hemels, ‘Perswetenschappelijke visies van Titus Brandsma’ in: Titus Brandsma herdacht, (ed. C. Struyker Boudier). Nijmegen 1985, 132.
[6] The Beatification of Father Titus Brandsma, Carmelite, (ed. R. Valabek). Rome 1986, 19.
[7] B. Secondin, Culture for Man. ibid., 111.
[8] K. Kasteel, Titus Brandsma. An Intrepid Example of Frisian Fidelity and Rectitude. ibid., 26-29.
[9] K. Kasteel, November 3: Beatification of Fr. Titus Brandsma. ibid., 68.
[10] See esp. J. Melsen, ‘Mystiek als levensdoel: Titus Brandsma’, in: Carmel 17 (1965), 157-173.
[11] Thus Regout in the Album amicorum Titi Brandsma (1939), in the Titus Brandsma archive of the Nederlands Carmelitaans Instituut (NCI) at Boxmeer.
[12] See O. Steggink, ‘Titus Brandsma herdacht en herzien’, in: Titus Brandsma herzien—herdacht—herschreven, (ed. C. Struyker Boudie). Baarn 1993, 36-38.
[13] Titus Brandsma, mystiek leven. Een bloemlezing, (ed. B. Borchert). Nijmegen 1985.
[14] Titus Brandsma en de mystiek (symposium report at the Titus Brandsma Institute). Nijmegen 1985.
[15] O. Steggink, ‘Titus Brandsma: meer dan hoogleraar’, in: Titus Brandsma herdacht, (ed. C. Struyker Boudier). Nijmegen 1985, 107-108, 126.
[16] Many folders are filled with them. They are stored in the NCI at Boxmeer.
[17] See A. Staring, ‘Love of Neighbour’, in: Essays on Titus Brandsma. 156-160.
[18] Ibid., 161-165.
A Spiritual Pathway to a Sustainable Environment: The Position of the Carmelite NGO on Climate Change
Eduardo Agosta Scarel, O.Carm.,
Principles
- The roots of the ecological crisis are linked to the way human beings relate both to the Divine and to nature.
- The human heart is not satisfied with anything less than the Infinite.
- Created things can never take the place of God.
- God has created us to live in harmony with all created things and with God the Creator.
- Societies with no understanding of this will seek to deal with unlimited human desire by fostering consumerism by every means possible.
- The Carmelite call to contemplation presents a path to wisdom that can heal both the human person and the planet on which we live.
- The Carmelite path of contemplation re-orders our human desire and helps us attain happiness without constantly feeding every whim.
- The Carmelite path can help people appreciate the beauty of Creation and see a way to preserve it for the good of future generations.
Introduction
The gift that Carmel has received from God for the world (the Carmelite charism) is essentially based on three elements: prayer, community, and service. They guide the transforming spiritual journey of Carmelites and come together in contemplation, one of the elements of our charism that dynamically unifies them.
The whole of reality could be regarded from a trinitarian perspective: God, human beings and other created things (both visible and invisible), in mutual interpenetration, held together by the Divine Power, the Spirit of God, the enveloping and sustaining source of reality. The contemplation of such reality is a call to discover or be aware of the empowering love of God within human beings and other created things. Such a process requires a profound transformation. The Carmelite way proposes that this transformation is aided by prayer, community and service that are the paths to contemplation.
Ecology is the human activity concerned with the comprehensive management of nature in order to regulate the relationships within and between all created things on the earth that is home to all. Comprehensive management involves taking into account the oft forgotten divine dimension. The expression ecological crisis, or environmental crisis, means that the comprehensive management of such relationships is at risk. The crisis arises from a number of factors including the lack of attention to the divine dimension of reality which is apparent in the way we have been behaving in westernized societies. The roots of the ecological crisis can be linked to the human relationship with the Divine and with nature. If this is so, the Carmelite value of contemplation can be regarded as an important way to rediscover the Divine dimension of reality. Therefore prayer, community and service are vital ways towards the healing of nature.
The Spiritual Roots of the Ecological Crisis
Understanding the link between ecology and the Carmelite charism requires understanding contemplation as a spiritual path that is intimately related to the human journey towards an integration of the human personality, both the dark and luminous sides. This is an ongoing journey towards maturity of human affectivity, intellect and sexuality. These three factors of human life can be considered as parts of the human desire dynamism. Carmelites sum up this journey towards integration with the proposal to live in allegiance to Jesus Christ (Constitutions 2). We believe that God has created us for life and to preserve harmonious relationships with all created things and with God. We need to understand that the roots of the current ecological crisis are human and not merely technical or scientific, as if ecological problems were only a matter of some changes in technology. It is not sufficient simply to change to new ‘clean’ technologies. If it were so, we would not be speaking about a crisis.
The current ecological crisis, evidenced by climate change, energy resource depletion, and an increasing gap between the richest and the poorest, seems to have started with a crisis within human beings. During the past century very profound social changes have taken place. Our understanding of what it means to be human has changed considerably. We moved from thinking of ourselves as creatures equipped with reason, self-sufficiency and freedom, able to make choices regarding what we considered to be best and proper for each of us, towards an understanding of the human being as eternally dissatisfied. Now technology, as a caring nanny, is expected to meet every need and desire.
Because of the huge development in technology, we have been able to take some extraordinary strides to transform nature and enhance and embellish the quality of life. However our expectations have risen greatly and we often look to technology to grant us everything we wish without delay. Our lives are now more comfortable and healthier, thanks to growing scientific knowledge. However, technological development has been appropriated by economic and cultural models to consolidate a particular way of living, which is the technocratic westernized lifestyle. Our western societies have various guiding mantras: ‘grow or die’; ‘if you are unhappy go out and buy something’; ‘quantity and acceleration’. Thus the traditional human rhythms and cycles of nature are forgotten. We seem unaware that the technocracy model of human development is a human construction and is not an uncontrollable natural force before which we must bow.
Conventional economic theory is part of the model of technocratic human development. It is based on the logic of dissatisfaction of desire. Westernized economies empower the rivalry between human desire and greed, by producing an abundance of goods to temporarily alleviate the tension of desire.
In addition, globalized societies, guided by the technocracy laws, have created their own myths. The absence of material goods is seen as the ultimate evil and so human desire and greed are encouraged at every level. Other dangerous mantras of our societies are: ‘full is better than empty’; ‘much is better than little’; ‘big is better than small’. Therefore we must fill everything, have everything, know everything.
We have a developmental model that is based on the dissatisfaction-desire economy. Human desire can be easily manipulated by external factors. This fact is observed within the phenomenon of globalization, where social fragmentation, and the creation of goods and services for consumption induced by advertising, all become external forces that irresistibly control us from within. We no longer consume the things we need but everything we are offered, without distinction. We have new needs that did not exist before. The technological novelties appear to be little paradises of illusion that are updated every day and suited to our increasingly fragmented world. Hence, consumerism has been imposed as the only way for the development of westernized life. It has been imposed by the strong interests in the local economy of global enterprises. The maximization of profit is at the expense of many people’s lives as well as the environment. In the future, there will not be sufficient energy sources for life as we are now consuming many resources at the lowest cost and the maximum gain.
Another dilemma is that human desire is unlimited. According to the Carmelite, Saint John of the Cross, the heart of the human being is not satisfied with less than Infinite (Living Flame of Love, 3, 18). For this reason when desire is given free rein on a global scale, natural resources are insufficient to satisfy it. The earth implodes. The physical limits of the planet are too finite in comparison to unlimited desire.
Apart from unlimited human desire and the economy based on that desire, there exists another human limitation which has a negative influence on the health of the earth. Our daily actions are performed locally, but their effects are global. We seem to be unaware of this fact. This limitation can be seen in the issue of climate change. Global warming is a symptom of the global social-economic model that is ultimately unsustainable. The planetary temperature is increasing because more greenhouse gases (GHGs, such as carbon dioxide, etc.) are constantly emitted. The GHGs emissions increments are due primarily to energy consumption of oil, natural gas and coal. Ninety percent of global energy consumption is provided by non-renewable power sources. Most of these are starting to disappear. It is said that oil-based energy will be available for another thirty to fifty years. The greater demands for energy come from the highly developed societies, which have 25 percent of the global population, and whose lifestyles are characterized by an excessive consumption. This means that we consume more than we need because of the manipulation of human desire through the latest thing constantly presented to us by means of the mass media.
Moreover, as a consequence of current global patterns of development and consumption, social injustice is prevalent in many parts of the world. Consumerism is a luxurious lifestyle when compared with half of the world’s population, that is to say that few technologically developed societies enjoy high standards by depleting global resources. A quarter of the global population consumes 80 percent of the earth’s resources in order to sustain their lifestyle.
The Path of Healing
The wisdom of the Carmelite tradition takes us on the inner journey towards the maturity of our human desires. It helps us to recognize the priority of God in our lives. Human desire seems to have such unique characteristics that perplex psychologists of all generations. We have immediate wants but often we do not know exactly what it is we really want. The spiritual path for human beings is to pay attention to what really matters. Only when a person is centred and when all the strengths of his/her desire are channelled in and towards God, is it possible to achieve equilibrium and peace.
John of the Cross, describes the origin of unlimited human desire. He says that it is as if God wounds the soul and human life is a search for relief. In seeking relief, we can be too demanding, asking things to take the place of God. That is always the temptation: to make created things (either material or spiritual) such as success, pleasure, happiness, sex, power, science, etc., as well as people, our idols or gods and ask them to fulfil our unlimited desires.
However, there is no thing or person that can take the place of God in our lives. The divine wound is only healed by the Spirit of God. John of the Cross teaches that human desire always runs the risk of fragmentation in multiple desires attaching themselves to things and people, seeking from them what they cannot give. The Carmelite tells of the need to direct our desire toward God who alone can bring harmony and peace. Our addictions and unconscious desires are not obstacles to eliminate but to face up to and integrate within the desire for the Infinite. This process does not mean despising things, since we need them, but is a way to bring some order to our desires. Hence, the Carmelite spiritual itinerary regards the interior of the human being as immensely cluttered and therefore needs to be emptied out in order to be filled by God, who is the fulfilment of every human desire.
Our secular societies have no other ways to treat unlimited human desire than to feed them with consumerism. Natural disasters, climate change, air and water pollution, social injustice, impoverishment of many peoples – among other environmental and social issues – are the result of unsustainable development patterns of production and consumption that are supported by economies based on the eternally dissatisfied human desire that has no God.
Concluding Remarks
The Carmelite call to contemplation is an inner journey that leads to our maturity and re-ordering of our human desires. This leads to a healing for people and for the earth. Human beings need to abandon the belief that fulfilment is to be found in amassing material goods. Then we will be able to liberate the earth from the obligation to satisfy this desire for more and more. Such a proposal is certainly not easy because it requires, as a first step, recognition that human desire cannot be satisfied by the material. Opening oneself to experience the empowering love of God can help to re-orient our desires towards a simpler lifestyle. We can then learn that immediate gratification is not always necessary or possible. It requires some sacrifice so that we can receive something greater and better.
The Carmelite contemplative path of transformation by means of prayer, community and service brings about a personal, communitarian and planetary healing, helping us to understand that:
- Few things are really vital to our lives.
- Little is often sufficient.
- Dissatisfaction is part of life.
- Human aspirations and desires are infinite because they are made for God.
There is no doubt that humanity must face its capacity for self-destruction, which was limited by the sense of the sacred in the past, but now appears to be unlimited. Without a growth in awareness of the divine dimension of reality, an ecological catastrophe seems to be inevitable. It is a time for contemplation so that we might rediscover that all human desire is a manifestation of the profound desire for God.
In our communities we need to recognize that our local actions have global effects. Therefore it is urgent to change our patterns of communitarian life that affect the health of the planet. We need to work for the development of a new economy based on needs, and not to supply a never ending desire for more. We seek to help people become aware of the need to preserve the quality of life for the whole of creation because God has clothed all people and all things with a particular beauty that reflects the beauty of the Creator.
Presented by Eduardo Agosta Scarel, O.Carm., to a meeting of the Carmelite NGO. The paper first appeared in ‘Meeting the People in the Marketplace’ produced by the Carmelite NGO and reproduced here with kind permission.
A Man on a Journey - Fr Jerónimo Gracián de la Madre de Dios (1614-2014)
In these most recent years we have been celebrating a number of centenaries that have great importance for the life of our Carmelite family: St Albert of Jerusalem and Jerónimo Gracián, the eighth and fourth centenaries of whose deaths occur respectively; and St Teresa of Jesus, the fifth centenary of whose birth occurs.
We would like to share some reflections on Fr Jerónimo Gracián with the whole Carmelite Family. We begin from the story of his life, not always well known to everybody. It is true that in these last few years, thanks to the publication of a series of bibliographies, studies and the edition of some of his writings, Gracián is beginning to find some space in Carmelite bibliography. It is also worth noting that in this process of recovery, his own La Peregrinación de Anastasio has had an important place.[1]
1. A Man of his Times – 1545-1572
Jerónimo Gracián was born in the Castilian city of Valladolid, on June 6th, 1545. It was there that he received the imprint that would develop to maturity in later life. Spanish and Polish blood ran through his veins. His father, Diego Gracián de Alderete, was ‘Latin Secretary to his Majesty’, King Philip II, and a humanist worthy of the name. He was distinguished for being an excellent calligrapher, polyglot and a connoisseur of classical culture. He worked as a secretary to bishops and as a translator of books, especially Greek and Latin books. In his youth he had a very close friendship with the one who would become his father-in-law, Juan Dantisco, Polish ambassador to the court of Charles I of Spain, and Charles V of Germany. With the passage of time he became a bishop, first of Culm, and later he was promoted to the Church of Warmia (Poland). Jerónimo Gracián would inherit both from his father and from his maternal grand-father a passion for literature and for classical culture.
Jerónimo Gracián was the third of twenty brothers. Teresa of Jesus used to sing the praises of his mother, Juana Dantisco on account of her deep piety, which she passed on to her children of whom seven entered religious life. The Carmelites were: María de San José, Isabel de Jesús, Juliana de Santa Teresa y Lorenzo Gracián. From his earliest years Jerónimo had a Jesuit as his spiritual director. He studied in the well-known university of Alcalá de Henares. At nineteen years of age, he was already a Master of Arts, a proof of his intelligence and his aptitude for study. He then studied theology, and came very close to the degree of Doctor. He was ordained a priest at twenty four years of age. His love for literature is widely known: “Reading and study of good books (principally from when I began to study Theology, which is my profession) has been something very ordinary, since the time when I was ten years old and I began to study, up to the present day” (PA, c. XV). The light of the Word, the cornerstone of his academic and theological formation, directed his reason and intellect towards the mystery of God (cf. Ps 108,109): “Our Lord helped him to understand that to knowledgeable people, whom he has enlightened through the ordinary pathway of study, it is not necessary to give particular revelations and visions.....” (PA, c. XV). Hence he affirms, “I set about writing” and “I did not hide the talent for writing that the Lord had given me” (PA, c. XV).
2. His encounter with Saint Teresa of Jesus – 1572-1592
When he was ordained and had finished his studies for a doctorate he began to think about the possibility of joining the Jesuits. In this time of searching he got to know the Carmelite nuns in Pastrana and the prioress of the community, Isabel de Santo Domingo. The life and spirit of these women fascinated him:
I received the habit in Pastrana, in 1572, having fought for a year and a half with this vocation, which was a real torment. All the natural reasons were against me at that point: poor health, natural laziness, study fatigue, obligations towards my parents and brothers (...) All of this, on the one hand, battled against a burning desire to serve our Lord, and, on the other hand, since the reform of this Order was beginning at that time, it seemed to me that my Lord was calling me for that (PA, c. I).
Our Lady of Mount Carmel would be his companion on the journey from the very beginning. Teresa of Jesus attributed his choosing the Carmelite Order to his great devotion to Mary and his great desire to serve her. He said, indeed, that when he was a child, he very often prayed before a statue of Mary, for whom he had a deep devotion and to whom he referred as his “lover”: “I am blinded by the love of such a lady.... I would lose my life, which I would give so willingly to my Lady, the Virgin Mary” (PA, c. I). In the view of Teresa of Jesus, it was the intervention of the Blessed Virgin that led him to choose the Carmelite habit (cf. F 23, 4-8).
His Carmelite adventure began with a lot of responsibilities, even though he was still only a novice. He recounts:
I received the habit, and straightaway the jobs began, and I was soon worn out from preaching and hearing confessions in the Carmelite house and in the town of Pastrana and in the towns and villages round about, where we had benefactors (...) I had to instruct thirty novices that later were the pride of the Order; and we were alone, so alone that we had to be careful that they were not affected by the antics of some of the professed who tried to tell them what to do, so that they would not leave the order, and we had to do no small amount of work in this regard (PA, c. I).
He went on to illustrate the rigours and penances that the professed wanted to inflict on the novices. The first novices were young men who could neither read nor write, and had little experience or wisdom..... All of this was the cause of a crisis for Fray Jerónimo: “... I was about to leave the Order and not make my profession on its account”. He persevered in Carmel, however, under the wise direction of Mother Isabel de Santo Domingo (PA, c. I).
His Commitment to the Reform
In Jerónimo Gracián there is a unity in his love for the Rule of Carmel and for the reform that Saint Teresa had begun, for the initial ideals and for the ability to achieve them in ways that were new and renewing. This convergence was an expression of the springtime that the Church was experiencing in the aftermath of the Council of Trent. In a certain sense, it is the same as we see in our own time. The Second Vatican Council reminded us that the Church is faithful to its vocation only by being reformed constantly,[2] and Pope Francis has noted:
There are ecclesial structures which can hamper efforts at evangelization, yet even good structures are only helpful when there is a life constantly driving, sustaining and assessing them. Without new life and an authentic evangelical spirit, without the Church’s ‘fidelity to her own calling’, any new structure will soon prove ineffective.[3]
Teresa was a woman who exercised the gift of friendship intensely. In the first meeting with Fr Jerónimo Gracián de la Madre de Dios, in Beas de Segura in 1575, we find a certain empathy, openness and confidentiality between them:
The master, Gracián, was here for twenty days ... I think well of him, and for us it were best that we ask God for him .... I can now stop worrying about the running of these houses, for such perfection with such gentility, I have never seen” (MC 81, to Mother Isabel de Santo Domingo, May 12th, 1575).
Following his profession, Jerónimo began to carry out tasks of some importance in the newly-born Reform of Carmel. Just a few months after his profession he was appointed Apostolic Visitator of the Carmelites in Andalucia: “Here I am, at 28 years of age, and a half year of profession, appointed the Prelate of the Carmelites in Andalucia, against the will of the General and Protector of the Calced Order” (PA c. I). In 1575, he would become the Apostolic Visitator of all the Carmelites in Andalucia, including the Discalced. At that time, he acted as the head of the Reform, the white-headed boy of Teresa of Jesus, to bring to completion the creation of the Discalced Province. In time, he would find himself in prison. In the end, and with the help of Philip II, a Brief from Rome confirmed the creation of the Discalced Province as part of the Carmelite Order. At the Chapter celebrated in Alcalá de Henares, in March 1581, Fr Jerónimo was elected Provincial of the Reformed Province. This is how he told the story:
The Fathers gathered for the Chapter in Alcalá; the province was set up; the laws were agreed; they elected me as their first Provincial, I governed the Province for my four years, opening houses of friars and nuns in the company of mother Teresa of Jesus, which involved all the ordinary work of travelling, doing business, writing letters, hearing confessions, preaching sermons and studying, etc. (PA, c. III).
On October 4th, 1582, Teresa died in Alba de Tormes: “Blessed be God, for giving me such a great friend, whose love, now in heaven, will not grow cold and I can be sure that it will be a great help to me” (PA, c. XVI). The reformer found in him, providentially, the person who would consolidate and direct all that she had begun. Writing about him, she said that he was “a man who was very well educated, with great understanding and modesty, graced by many virtues all his life, it seems as if Our Lady chose him for the good of this primitive Order”.[4] What was notable, in talking about his style of governing, was the combination of goodness and firmness:
His manner is pleasant which means that for the most part those who deal with him love him (a grace from the Lord), such that he is loved very much by those who are under him, both men and women, and while he does not forgive any fault – because in this he cared very much about the spread of devotion – he was always able to act with such a pleasing gentleness that no one ever had reason to complain about him.[5]
St Teresa confided in him, promising him obedience (CC 30, 3) and, thanks to this vow, Fr Jerónimo could ask her not only to open new monasteries but also to complete the writing of her book on the Foundations and to write about her spiritual life which she did in the Interior Castle. Similarly, out of obedience to him, Teresa posed for her portrait to be painted by Fray Juan de la Miseria, thus leaving behind the well-known portrait which has been handed down to us (cf. PA, c. XIII).
Jerónimo Gracián, for his part, followed the teaching of Teresa of Jesus. This gave him the imprint of the evolving charism, and became a source of great spiritual and human sustenance in his apostolic activity. Teresa’s regard for Jerónimo had many features that covered the spectrum from loving mother to grateful child. The intense correspondence that went between them is legendary (CC 29,1; 30,3) and his friendship provided a valve for Teresa: “I am happy that Fray Antonio is not with you, because, they tell me, when he sees so many letters of mine and none of them for him, he gets upset” (MC 170 to Padre Jerónimo Gracián, around December, 1576). Fr Gracián remembered it as well:
She shared her spirit with me, not hiding anything from me, and I did the same with her, revealing everything I had inside, and in that way we were certain that we were in agreement on everything that had to do with the task in hand and she, as well as her religious vow, made another vow of obedience to me for the rest of her life, because of a particular revelation that she received (PA, c. XIII).
Fr Jerónimo also gave of himself, by accepting all that she taught. Teresa gave him his dreams and, much more, his ideals and his charismatic commitment: that is why, as well as being a friend and confidante for him, she was also ‘mother’. Not only that, he found in her the master that guided him through the pathways of the interior life, inspiring his ministry to the friars and nuns of the Reform.
The Brothers say ‘No’
In Lisbon, in 1585, Fr Nicolas Doria was elected Provincial and Fr Gracián remained as Vicar Provincial. Then, later, he was elected as the Vicar Provincial of the new province of Mexico at the intermediate Chapter that was held in Valladolid in 1587. He could not leave with the fleet that sailed to the so-called West Indies, because in 1587 and in 1588 no fleet set sail. He would instead spend two years in Portugal at the request of Cardinal Alberto, the Viceroy of Portugal, and he became the Apostolic Visitator of the Portuguese Carmelites. He was called to Madrid in 1590 and this was the beginning of his Calvary. He would end up being expelled from the Discalced Carmelites on February 17th, 1592, among whom he had been the first provincial, after being accused of not being strict enough and of devoting more time to the apostolate than to the regular life and of having dishonest dealings with Maria de San José, formerly the prioress of Seville and, at that time, prioress of Lisbon.
They stripped Fr Jerónimo of his discalced habit which he had worn for twenty years, and dressed him in secular attire. “Finally they have taken away my habit, after a long period in prison. I was sorry that then they gave me a mantle and cassock of very good material, that belonged to a novice that had entered” (PA, c. IV). He finished by confessing the pain that he felt: “Only the one who has suffered it can tell what it is like, for one who entered the Discalced Order with the vocation with which I entered, and suffered so much to build the Province, and given the habit to the ones who now have taken it from me” (PA, c. IV). From that moment, he went back to being the priest, Don Jerónimo Gracián.
3. The test of Fidelity – 1592-1596
The new stage in the life of Fr Jerónimo Gracián runs through a continuous pilgrimage, from one place to another, from one experience to another, passing through the quest for justice, the search for a place where he would be welcomed, and a bitter captivity in a strange land. This was a time of purification that was providential in that it helped him to centre himself in the heart of the Gospel, and in his religious life, helping to confirm his choosing to enter Carmel. In the most adverse situations, when things were falling apart, Fr Jerónimo always managed to look far ahead, by living in allegiance to Jesus Christ (Rule, Ch. 2) and by preaching the Gospel. Perhaps he is a more than significant witness for religious life today, in a time of crisis, and apparent disheartenment.
Later he would say that he asked the Lord for the “desire to suffer” and to carry a “naked and shameful cross” because “it appeared to him as the straightest and safest way to reach heaven” (PA, c. VIII). God heard his prayer. In time, he would say that the Lord did not delay in granting him what he had asked with such insistence: “Not long after this prayer I began to see that God was giving me his grace and was granting me all that I asked” (PA, c. VIII). Indeed, he came to know persecutions, displacement, fears, dangers, insults and other labours, that taught him a very sweet science: “that every virtue comes from the love of God and of neighbour and every virtue has that same love as its ultimate aim” (PA, c. XV). Fr Jerónimo discovered that we cannot decaffeinate the Gospel, and that anyone “who does not love the one who hates him is not a Christian,[6] because love for enemies is a fundamental law”[7] and “the supreme quintessence of virtue”.[8] In his Peregrinación he illustrates this with an example:
I thought of my adversaries as images of Christ .... If a tabernacle or a pyx of poor stone can contain the Most Blessed Sacrament, I would never not want to adore him and reverence him, even though I might like to see him dressed in gold and fine clothing. I know that God is in essence, presence and power in the one who persecutes me. Yes, I would love the tabernacle to be more beautiful, but I close my eyes to all that is outside and not to what is contained within (PA, c. XI).
Fr Jerónimo Gracián did not share the view of those who made a virtue out of strictness of observance, the banner of the reform and an end in itself. The conflict that led to his expulsion could be summed up in a paragraph that he left us in his writings:
Because there are spirits to whom it seems that all Carmelite perfection lies in not leaving their cell, or in never missing choir, even though the whole world may have gone up in flames, and that the good of the Order consisted in multiplying houses in the small towns and villages in Spain, and leaving the rest, and that think that every other way of thinking is restlessness and laxity. God did not lead me by this route, but rather by the way of saving souls; and in relation to the people that we employ in small places, we should begin with them to found houses in the more important cities in the different kingdoms for the real spread and benefit of the Order. And, as I talked about this many times and in great detail with Mother Teresa of Jesus, whose zeal was for the conversion of the whole world, this way of doing things stuck to me even more (PA, c. III).
One question went round and round in Gracián’s head: “Where is God?” The answer was clear: “there where love is uppermost” (PA, c. X). Gracián was faithful to the premise that “flexibility” is a good companion on the journey, that love is “creative” and that the one who does good is never lost.
Perseverance in the test: “Adam’s habit”
“Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will hardship, or distress, or persecution, or famine or nakedness or peril, or sword?” (Romans 8:35). Gracián’s pilgrimage continued with his journey to Rome to seek the protection of the Pope and he succeeded in speaking to Clement VIII. The Pontiff, through his secretaries, expressed the view that he should join another religious Order. He asked to join “the Capuchins, the Cistercians, the Discalced Franciscans, and all the other orders, asking to receive their habit: none would give it to me, and I saw myself rejected by every Order, as if I was the most despicable religious that you could find on the earth” (PA, c. V). He passed through Naples, and Sicily (where he stayed for eight months, helping out and hearing confessions in a hospital). On January 27th, 1593, the Pope wrote a Brief, Uberes fructus, in which he confirmed Fr Gracián’s expulsion from the Discalced Carmelites, ordering him to join the Augustinians or some other observant Order. He left the port of Gaeta to travel to Rome:
As I came to the end of Mass, in which – against the interior pressure that came from the Virgin Mary and from Teresa of Jesus never to leave their Order – I decided to join the Discalced Augustinians, as the wind began to die down, the ships, on account of that, began to slow (PA, c. V).
The Gospel proclaimed, by one in chains
God worked hard on Fr Jerónimo Gracián. He asked God for “humility” and life offered him more than enough “humiliations” and opportunities to demonstrate how right his petition was. One more episode was added to his turbulent biography: his captivity in Argel. In his Peregrinación, Gracián writes about his ups and downs, his interest in evangelising and, finally, his freedom. More than once, while spending a long spell in prison he was sure that he was going to be executed. Gracián, zealous as ever for the salvation of souls, did not waste time. He writes about the conversations he had, how he preached, heard confessions and helped in getting release for people in prison. In the midst of the torment and restrictions of his own imprisonment he recounts:
I heard the confessions of my captive Christians ... comforting them when they were beaten with a stick, pacifying their quarrels and visiting them when they were sick. If they wanted to cut somebody’s nose or ears, I would manage to get forgiveness with a little money, which I got faithfully from the same Christians (PA, c. VI).
In many ways, throughout his whole life, Jerónimo was devoted to the mission of evangelisation. During his four years as Provincial he gave a missionary and expansionary slant to the Province that he governed: thus he had houses opened in Genoa (1584), the Congo (1584) and in Mexico (1585). Despite being held in captivity, he still managed to preach the Gospel to his companions and his captors. Returning to the Order he was at the Pope’s disposal to take on any missionary expedition and he dedicated some of his writings to this. This missionary zeal came out of his great desire to “save souls” and to bring the Gospel to the ends of the earth. He said to Teresa that
sometimes it seemed to him that (a statue of the Blessed Virgin) had eyes that were swollen from weeping over the many offenses committed against her Son. As a result there arose in him a strong impulse and desire to help souls, and he felt it very deeply when he saw offenses committed against God. He has so great an inclination toward the good of souls that any hardship becomes small to him if he thinks that through it he can produce some fruit. I have seen this myself in the many trials that he has undergone.[9]
Teresa, evidently, did not imagine that still more trials awaited him, nor the greatness of spirit that he would show in them.
4. In Mary’s Habit – 1596-1614
On April 11th, 1595, the Bajá of Tunisia signed his letter of freedom. He arrived in Genoa where began a new and final stage in his life which covered the last eighteen years, as a Carmelite (O.Carm.). Gracián himself recounts that he arrived in Rome, threw himself at the feet of the Pope and got his permission to return to wearing the Carmelite habit. That is what Gracián tells us, as he summed up in just a few lines all that happened in his life until he got to Belgium:
He ordered me to put on the habit of the (calced) Carmelites despite the fact that the conclusion of the Consultation was that I was not to wear any habit, neither Carmelite nor Discalced Carmelite. I spent a short time in San Martin in Montibus (sic) with the (calced) Carmelites. From there the Protector of my Order sent me to the home of Cardenal Deza, the protector in Spain. I worked for him for five years as a theologian, writing and printing books. From the memos that I had written to the Pope it emerged that to the Congregation of Cardinals of Propaganda Fide De and to the Pope it seemed that I should return to Africa with a mission that they gave me to bring the Jubilee of the Holy Year to the Christians in those places. I had letters from the King for the guards at the borders that they should afford me safe passage. I was present for my mother’s death. I went to Cueta, and from there to Tetuan: I accomplished my mission; I returned with orders to make peace between our King and the Jarife; it didn’t work. I came to the house in Madrid: from there I went to Valencia and Alicante and then back to Rome to report to Pope Clement VIII: God took him to himself; I remained preaching and printing books in Valencia. They sent me to Pamplona to preach for Lent. From there I came to Flanders (PA, c. VIII).
Fr Jerónimo – in his Peregrinación – never ceases to express his joy and contentment with the treatment he received in the Carmelite Order.
They showed great pleasure in seeing me wearing their habit. The General soon made me Master of the Order and they gave me the seniority that I would have had if I had made my profession with them when I made my profession with the Discalced, and I have held on to that always, which is no small thing for which to be thankful (PA, c. XIV).
While the time he spent with the Reform was particularly fruitful in terms of his work in governing, his time with the Ancient Observance was distinguished for his gifts as a preacher and prolific writer.[10] Jerónimo now wrote on behalf of prelates and of the Prior General of the Order and his works include everything from missionary activity to the history and spirituality of Carmel. On the instructions of Fr Enrique Silvio, then Prior General of the Order, elected in Rome in 1598, he wrote his famous commentary on the Rule of the Order – Della disciplina regolare[11] – to stimulate the members of the Order towards greater observance. At that time he was also working tirelessly on printing the writings of St Teresa into other languages and on promoting her beatification. Flanders was the last stop on his journey. There he finished the writing of his Peregrinación de Anastasio, Dialogues of the persecutions, works, tribulations and crosses that Fr Jerónimo Graacian de la Madre de Dios suffered.
Gracián arrived in Brussels in 1607. He would spend the next years alternating an eremitical life, in a hermitage in the garden of the house, with his preaching and hearing confessions and working with the Discalced Carmelites who were beginning to open houses in that country. He had the joy of being alive when Mother Teresa of Jesus was beatified on April 24th, 1614, by Paul V. On September 21st, 1614, at six o’clock in the evening of that Sunday, Jerónimo Gracián died, a Carmelite. We have to include in his missionary activities the publication of the works of Teresa in Protestant areas, as well as his own works: Diez lamentaciones del miserable estado de los ateístas[12] (Ten Lamentations of the Miserable Condition of Atheists) and Leviatán engañoso, suma de algunos engaños[13] (The Deceitful Leviathan: an Account of Some Deceits). Just like Teresa, he wanted to respond, in a certain sense, to the schism that was created in the Church by the Lutheran separation, by opening monasteries in which there would be faithful and joyful witness to the Gospel. Jerónimo, through the diffusion of Teresa’s teaching, had the intention of offering a model of life transfigured by the Gospel and at the service of the Church.
Conclusion: victoria amoris – the victory of love (PA, c. x)
Clothe the naked is the first work of mercy according to the Hebrew tradition (cf. Matthew 25:36). Fr Jerónimo Gracián spent his whole life looking for clothes to put on: “I received the Discalced habit”; “they dressed me up in secular dress”; “they gave me a cloak and cassock of the finest material”; “they made me wear the habit of wretchedness”; “I saw that I was naked and I put on my new Adam’s suit”; “they gave me once again the calced habit”, etc. At the end of his life, with wisdom and discernment, he was able to say: God is well able to see that there is as much fruit from one habit as from another, as my own experience has shown me (PA, c. XVI). The ‘habit’ that he received went beyond his expectations: it was not an external garment, but an interior one. Gracián, just like Joseph in the book of Genesis, was stripped of his cloak (Genesis 37:3, 23, 31; 39:12; 41:14) in order to put on the “cloak of fine linen” (cf. Genesis 41:42) Linen, in order to be woven and become softer and more bright and luminous, has to be beaten and pounded. The linens are the good works of the saints ... (Acts 19:8). The epitaph of a Jewish rabbi illustrates what Jerónimo Gracián went through: “For every good work that a man does on the earth, a thread of light lights up in the heavens. Many good works make many threads. Why? In order to weave a garment of light. A garment of light that gives glory to the Master of the works”. A ‘garment of light’ made from threads of mercy, goodness, humility, meekness, patience, forgiveness, peace, and the love which binds everything together in perfect harmony (cf. Colossians 3:12-15).
Fr Jerónimo Gracián invites us to become craftsmen and craftswomen of peace and reconciliation, so that, seeing our good works, the Father who is in heaven may be glorified (Matthew 5:16). Gracián’s peregrinación (pilgrimage) is the expression of a deeper spiritual journey, which is a response to the love that God poured into his heart through our Blessed Mother, in his desire to take on the Rule of Carmel in accordance with the teachings of Teresa of Jesus and his passionate desire to give himself to others for their salvation. This victoria amoris – victory of love – (PA c. X) lived, above all, in moments of tension, was an ecstasy of love for him, but not in the sense of a momentary flash, but as something permanent, a going out from the “I” closed in on itself, towards the liberation that comes from committing oneself and by so doing comes to find oneself again, and even more, to find God.[14] In Gracián’s pilgrimage we begin to see the pilgrimage of every disciple, and for that reason, our pilgrimage too, as we endeavour to follow that same path marked out by Jesus “which, through the cross brings him to the resurrection; the route of the grain of wheat that falls on the ground and dies, and so gives abundant fruit.”[15] We give thanks to God because we can reap the fruit of the witness and the message that our brother Jerónimo Gracián has left us.
Fernando Millán Romeral, O.Carm., Prior General
Saverio Cannistrà, O.C.D., Provost General
[1] Jerónimo Gracián de la Madre de Dios: Peregrinación de Anastasio. Ed. Juan Luis Astigarraga. Roma: 2001. Hereafter: PA with the number of the chapter.
[2] Cf. Unitatis Redintegratio, 6; Lumen Gentium, 8; Gaudium et Spes, 21.
[3] Pope Francis: Evangelii Gaudium, 26.
[4] Teresa de Jesús: Foundations 23, 1.
[5] Ibid, Foundations 23, 7.
[6] 2 Epistle of Clement, 13ss.
[7] Tertulian: Tract on Patience, 6.
[8] John Chrysostom: Sermons on the Gospel according to Matthew, 18, 3.
[9] Teresa de Jesús: Foundations 23, 5.
[10] Nicolás Antonio: Bibliotheca Nova Hispana. Madrid: 1684.
[11] Fr Jerónimo Gracián: Della Disciplina Regolare. Venice: 1600.
[12] Fr Jerónimo Gracián: Diez lamentaciones del miserable estado de los ateístas. Brussels: 1611.
[13] Fr Jerónimo Gracián: Leviathan engañoso, suma de algunos engaños. Brussels: 1614.
[14] Pope Benedict XVI: Deus caritas est, 6.
[15] Ibid, 6.




















