Monday, July 11, 1977
Proper 10
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Fifth Sunday after Trinity
Let your merciful ears, O Lord, be open to the prayers of your humble servants; and, that we may receive what we ask, teach us by your Holy Spirit to ask only those things that are pleasing to you; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the same Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
Most liturgical texts are from the Book of Common Prayer (2019) of the Anglican Church in North America.
The New Coverdale Psalter, © 2019 by the Anglican Church in North America. Used by permission.
Abbot of Monte Cassino and Father of Western Monasticism
Ecumenical Commemoration
Benedict of Nursia gave Western monasticism its enduring shape. Withdrawing to a cave at Subiaco and then founding the great house of Monte Cassino, he wrote a Rule of such balance and humanity, ordering a whole life around prayer, work, and the slow reading of Scripture under an abbot, that it became the pattern for monks across Europe for fifteen centuries. He is honored as a father of monks and a patron of Europe.
Nearly everything known about Benedict's life comes from Book II of Gregory the Great's Dialogues, written around 593 — roughly forty years after Benedict's death. According to Gregory, Benedict was born around 480 in Nursia (modern Norcia) in Umbria and was sent to Rome for studies. Appalled by the decadence he found there, he abandoned his education and withdrew to the mountains east of Rome, eventually settling in a cave at Subiaco where he lived as a hermit for three years.
His reputation for holiness attracted disciples, and he organized them into twelve small monasteries of twelve monks each. When jealousy from a local priest made his position at Subiaco untenable, Benedict moved south around 529 and established the monastery of Monte Cassino on a hilltop that still housed a pagan shrine, which he destroyed.
At Monte Cassino, Benedict wrote the Rule that bears his name. Drawing on earlier monastic traditions — particularly the Rule of the Master, Basil's monastic writings, and the practices of John Cassian — he produced a document of remarkable balance. The daily round was organized around the Divine Office (the Opus Dei, 'work of God'), with regular periods for manual labor, sacred reading (lectio divina), and communal meals. Authority was vested in an abbot elected for life, but the Rule insisted that the abbot consult all the brothers before making important decisions — 'because the Lord often reveals to the younger what is better.'
The Rule's genius lay in its moderation. Benedict called it 'a little rule for beginners' and deliberately avoided the extreme asceticism of the Egyptian desert tradition. Food, sleep, clothing, and work were calibrated for sustainability rather than heroic endurance, making the monastic life accessible to ordinary people over a full lifetime.
Benedict died at Monte Cassino around 550. Gregory records that he died standing in the chapel, supported by his monks, his arms raised in prayer.
Benedict became the subject of extensive hagiographic tradition. Gregory's Dialogues record numerous miracles: supernatural knowledge of distant events, power over demons, healings, authority over nature. Later medieval sources elaborate further with additional miraculous narratives.