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So far brett has created 224 blog entries.

Corpus Christi 2019

2019-06-20T15:36:18-05:00June 20th, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My very dear sons,

The Most Holy Eucharist, celebrated and consummated in the Sacrifice of Mass, is all about thanksgiving, a unique prayer of thanksgiving that embraces Heaven and Earth, past and present, and future, touching the very threshold of eternity. The giving of thanks is the very meaning of the Greek word from which “Eucharist” is derived. It is to be feared that we have very much lost this sense of thanksgiving to God under the spell of our godless modern world. Was it not really a lack of thanksgiving in France and in the whole Western World that set Notre-Dame cathedral on fire and brought down the spire that once pointed to the stars? This is a serious matter.

The lack of thanksgiving among human beings […]

Whitsunday 2019

2019-06-09T12:27:49-05:00June 9th, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

Emitte spiritum tuum et creabuntur, et renovabis faciem terrae. Send forth thy spirit, and they shall be created: and thou shalt renew the face of the earth. (Ps. 103:30)

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My very Dear Sons,

A prominent French philosopher writing in the 20th century famously said about the century to come—speaking in a kind of secular prophetic mode—that it, the twenty-first century, “would be spiritual or it would not be at all”. (André Malraux 1901-1976) Thus far, in disproof of that prophecy, we see our new century embedded in materialism, a technological materialism especially, that claims each day more our allegiance against the no less depressing general cultural background of the new paganism, and this very un-spiritual quality of it all seems quite likely to go on. It is true: […]

Ascension Thursday 2019

2019-05-30T12:14:49-05:00May 30th, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My Very Dear Sons,

The mystery of the Ascension of the Lord represents the consummation of a series of displacements, of great movements, involving the Word made flesh. Saint Paul, quoting Psalm 67, explains it thus:

Ascending on high he led captivity captive; he gave gifts unto men. Now, that he ascended, what is it, but because he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? He that descended is the same also that ascended above all the heavens, that he might fill all things. (Ephesians 4:8-10, citing Psalm 67:19)

Indeed, the Lord Christ, the Word of the Father, had first to go downward, as it were, in order to accomplish His mission, taking upon Himself our human nature, a nature infinitely beneath […]

Easter Sunday 2019

2019-04-21T12:07:14-05:00April 21st, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

I arose, and am still with thee, alleluia: thou hast laid thy hand upon me: thy knowledge is become wonderful, alleluia, alleluia. (Psalm 138:18)

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My very dear sons,

In the beginning of the world, as we read in the book of Genesis, God’s first fiat, His first particular creation, was that of light: “And God said: ‘Let there be light (fiat lux).’ And light was made.” (Gensis 1:3) The sacred text goes on to state that “God saw the light that it was good,” or as the ancient Greek version would have it, that the light was beautiful, καλόν.

Surely, after the dreadful darkness of Good Friday, with its specter of Judas’ treason and the fearful shadows that came upon the natural world at the moment of […]

Maundy Thursday: In Cena Domini 2019

2019-04-18T11:50:17-05:00April 18th, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

Before the festival day of the pasch, Jesus knowing that his hour was come, that he should pass out of this world to the Father, having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them unto the end. (John 13:1)

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My Very Dear Sons,

How do we grasp something of the mystery, seemingly impenetrable, of Maundy Thursday, of this night so unlike all others, when troubling things are coming to a head, to a climax that the Apostles and Disciples themselves do not fathom? There is light here, no doubt, for example in the institution of the Most Holy Eucharist–the reason why the liturgical vestments are white–and in the sublime words the Savior pronounces during His great Discourse of farewell in Saint John. There is spiritual brightness […]

St Benedict Transitus 2019

2019-03-21T10:00:18-05:00March 21st, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My Very Dear Sons,

Today we celebrate the transitus of Our Blessed Father Saint Benedict, which is to say his passage from this earthly life to Heaven, his departure out of our mortal existence, in a word, his death. Although death is ever a sad event in a human life, the reminder of the sin of Adam and of its dark empire over the sons of Adam; nevertheless, in the case of the Saints, death appears more as a kind of triumph, something like what the ancients called the apotheosis, the culmination of a whole life. Such is eminently the case for the great Patriarch of the monks of the West we honor today.

Like Saint Francis, Saint Dominic and many other Saints, whose stories of the […]

There is No Other Way

2024-09-14T16:09:16-05:00March 13th, 2019|Letters to the Friends|

Dear Friend of Clear Creek Abbey,

The clerical sexual abuse crisis that has now reached alarming proportions is like the many-headed Hydra that Hercules had to kill as one of his Twelve Labors—worse still, like the Beast of the Apocalypse with seven heads (chapter 13), something extremely hard to kill. Indeed, the restoration of the virtue of chastity in all its dimensions has become an urgent matter—a matter of spiritual life or death. What is desperately needed is a substantial reaffirmation of the Catholic doctrine concerning chastity and a new commitment to the vow of priestly celibacy, which is its corollary.

Surprisingly enough, our formula of monastic profession does not even mention chastity specifically. For as Dom Delatte points out, chastity—like poverty—is “included in the promise to observe monastic customs and the monastic […]

Boars and Acorn Bread

2024-09-16T15:31:42-05:00February 13th, 2019|Letters to the Friends|

Dear Friend of Clear Creek Abbey,

Many in our day seek ways of living closer to the land. At Clear Creek we are fortunate to have abundant natural resources in the rugged woodlands God has provided for us. Here follows a description of some techniques we are learning in an effort to make good use of these gifts of Creation. — br. Philip Anderson, abbot

Cherokee County, Oklahoma, is not known as Big Ag country: tractors in these parts (if folks have them at all) are small, and there are no “amber waves of grain” for as far as the eye can see. The harsh climate combined with the rocky soil require a more flexible approach to agriculture, aided by frequent and fervent prayer. Also helpful is an appreciation that “small is beautiful.” […]

Epiphany 2019

2019-01-06T10:00:00-06:00January 6th, 2019|Homilies of Father Abbot|

And behold, the star which [the wise men] had seen in the East went before them, until it came and stood over where the child was. (Matt. 2:9)

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My very Dear Sons,

As with the feast of Christmas, of which it is a continuation, the Epiphany presents to us a mystery of light. On the third day within the octave of the Epiphany, for example, we sing, “O Christ, Thou Light of light hast appeared, unto Whom the Magi offer gifts, Alleluia.” Great is the brightness that shines forth here amid the exterior darkness of the winter and the world. There is the light of the star that leads the Wise Men from the East; there is the light of Faith that begins to illuminate the world in […]

Christmas 2018

2018-12-25T10:00:04-06:00December 25th, 2018|Homilies of Father Abbot|

And suddenly with the angel a multitude of the heavenly army, praising God, and saying: Gloria in altissimis Deo, and on earth peace to men of good will.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
My very dear sons,

In accordance with the age-old liturgical tradition, we celebrate today three Masses: the Angels’ Mass at Midnight (now); the Shepherds’ Mass at dawn; and the King’s Mass in late morning. The first two of these masses emphasize the human nature of Christ, while the third takes us into the depths of the Lord’s divinity, into the abyss of His eternal generation from the Father. But these various aspects of the mystery of Christmas appear to us in perfect harmony. They point to the one Christ, the one Word-Made-Flesh. It is this fully Catholic, complete, idea of […]

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