Posts

What satisfies – by Father Raymond Gawronski, S.J., Professor of Theology, Saint Patrick’s Seminary

“Our hearts are made for Thee O
Lord, and they will not rest until they rest in Thee.”
St. Augustine’s famous words say
it all: for we are made to know – and experience – God, and we will be restless
until we come to that rest. Son of St. Ignatius, Balthasar would add: that
“rest” is the acceptance of the mission God has for us, and that is a most
active “rest.” But it is the “peace that the world cannot give,” and so not a
philosophical repose, but rather an active “rightness” which comes from being
in the will of God, however that may look.
Put differently, “what satisfies
the soul?” What satisfies the deepest part of me? It is clear from all the
“restless wanderings” of the people of the world that they are not finding that
which satisfies. Half the people are terribly overweight – food does not
satisfy. Many, maybe most, are engaged in some sort of driven sexual search –
if only on the Internet. But the satisfaction there is momentary, leading to a
period of exhaustion, and then a renewed hunt, more restless – more desperate –
than before.
There are simpler satisfactions.
The contemplation of nature, the immersion of our starved senses in the world
God created, satisfies for awhile, and that in a healthy way. But nature is
less than we, and so can only give a bit of respite, a bit of memory of
Paradise. There are more sophisticated satisfactions. The world of the mind
opens up. The satisfactions of intellectual sustenance, the pleasures of art –
all these lift and feed the soul. For awhile. But in the end, they are only
invitations, beautiful portals – to a reality beyond any of them.
And this reality can only be
found in silence and darkness, for it is so totally different from all that is
less than God, who is infinitely beyond us, that we must enter into the
negation of all that we know, all our ways of knowing, in order to “know” in
the “divine darkness.”
And so, calming all the senses,
stilling our beings, we sit in the quiet – and await the working of the Holy
Spirit of God. The very being there, the receiving of the invitation, the
saying “yes” is itself a step into that “otherness” that begins to satisfy our
souls, as nothing in this world can. We can – we must – bathe in these deep,
dark waters, immerse ourselves, let ourselves drown in fact, that we may be
lifted out of them.
We emerge to the greater
satisfaction: that of love. No longer needy, no longer demanding. Rooted in
that death which alone gives life,  in
that silence from which alone satisfying sound emerges, we have found
satisfaction, by renouncing all lesser satisfactions.  And we no longer demand that humans give us
that which they cannot give: eternal life, perfect understanding, total
acceptance and forgiveness.
This satisfaction has a name, for
“it” is a person: His Name is Jesus, the “human face of God.” The Word that
emerges from the Silence and invites us to that silence from which the only
satisfying speech – the only real music – will emerge. From the heart of the
Trinity.  May we be blessed to enter into
this life-giving silence that alone stills our restless hearts, that alone
satisfies. 

Father Raymond Gawronski, S.J. is a spiritual theologian and the author of Word and Silence: Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Spiritual Encounter between East and West, Second Spring Books: 3rd Edition (2015). He helped launch the Spirituality Year at the founding of Saint John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver where he served as professor, director of spiritual formation and retreat master, and most recently he started a similar program for Saint Patrick’s Seminary where he also teaches and serves as a spiritual director.

The Two Standards

On the Podcast show “Catholic Stuff You Should Know,” hosts Father John Nepil and seminarian Joe Doman interview Father Raymond Gawronski, S.J. and me on the two standards of St. Ignatius of Loyola (click here).  Father Gawronski helped design the Spirituality Year for St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver, Colorado.  He has provided the long retreat of St. Ignatius for the seminarians of Denver for the last fourteen years.  

Montserrat and St. Ignatius


We had mass at the Benedictine Monastery at Montserrat up above Barcelona today and tomorrow we will go to Manresa.  What ties these two places together is St. Ignatius of Loyola.  Montserrat has a miraculous image of Our Lady – said to be associated with St. Luke.  It is believed that this image was discovered by shepherds in 880 A.D. although some historians believe it was actually carved in the 12th Century.  Whatever the actual history, there have been various shrines on top of this mountain where Christians have dedicated their lives to prayer for over a millennium.  Benedictines eventually founded a monastery there in the 11th Century.



St. Ignatius came here after his initial conversion.  Wounded by a canon ball during a battle and while recovering at his brother’s house he discovered the presence of the Risen Lord in his life.  He noticed this presence through reading.  When he read novels about chivalry and romance, he reflected on how these entertained him while he was reading but afterwards left him empty.  When he read the lives of the saints, he discovered that his heart burned within and stirred with desires to imitate their zeal for the Lord.  Recognizing the opposition of these two movements of the spirit helped him see Christ as the one who could help him live life to the full.  Indeed, we only discover the gift of who we really are through an authentic gift of ourselves to others, and Christ alone makes givings ourselves in this way a real possibility. Ignatius wanted this possibility in his life and he resolved to follow Christ.  With this resolution, he went to Montserrat and spent two days making a confession of all his sins.  After his confession, he spent the night in prayer – as a knight in arms – before Our Lady of Montserrat.  At the end of his prayer, he left his sword with our Lady and decided to spend the rest of his life as a pilgrim doing penance.  This would eventually lead him to Manresa.  Here he spent a year in solitude – fasting, praying and doing penance.  He battled severe bouts with depression and all kinds of spiritual trials.  In the end, he had a deep encounter with the Holy Trinity, gained wisdom of heart and wrote down his insights in what we now know as the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius.  



This was an important day for our seminarians.  Before their formal studies, all of them go through a year of spiritual formation which seeks to tap the wisdom of heart St. Ignatius learned at Manresa.  While I do not think they have visions of the Trinity as did the founder of the Society of Jesus, many of them experience graces that are life changing in all kinds of different ways.  It is the wisdom of heart that one gains through being generous with God in prayer and with one’s life that most prepares them for the work God has for them.  Please keep them in prayer that we might gain this wisdom- tomorrow to Madrid!