Brother John by August Turak

Here's an award winning essay that I've been aware of for several years, and felt moved to share it here. It's about how inner alchemy is the true purpose of life. It's a bit lengthy, but well worth the time, in my opinion. So, if you feel moved to check it out, enjoy.

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Brother John

By August Turak

“In any case, I feel I can personally guarantee that St. Thomas Aquinas loved God, because for the life of me I cannot help loving St. Thomas.”     ~Flannery O’Conner

 

Uncertainty as to life’s purpose is much in vogue today. So too are the relativistic notions that would consign life’s purpose to a matter of taste. The agony of life is uncertainty and the rationalization is that uncertainty is certain. However, the plain truth is that for all our anguish we treasure uncertainty. Doubt forestalls action. The problem with life’s purpose is that we know damn well what it is but are unwilling to face the changes in our lives that a commitment to self-transcendence, to being the best human being we could possibly be, would entail. It wearies us just thinking about it. So we rationalize that it’s all “relative,” or that we’re already doing enough and don’t have time. Worst of all we rationalize that those who do accept the challenges inherent in self-transcendence are uniquely gifted and specially graced.

 

It was eight in the evening on Christmas Eve and I was waiting for Mass to begin. This was my third Christmas retreat at Mepkin Abbey monastery and my third Christmas Eve Mass. Mepkin Abbey sits on 3,132 acres shaded by towering mossy oaks running along the Cooper River just outside Charleston, South Carolina. Once the estate of Henry and Clare Boothe Luce, it is now a sanctuary for thirty or so Trappist monks living a life of contemplative prayer according to the arduous Rule of St. Benedict.

 

Already 18 days into my retreat, I was finally getting used to getting up at three in the morning for Vigils. However I also knew that by the time this special Mass ended at 10:30 it would be well after our usual bed time of 8 o’clock. The church was hushed and dark, and two brothers began lighting the notched candles lining the walls as Gregorian chant sung by the hidden choir wafted in from the chapel. This chapel, a favorite meditation spot for the monks, sits just off the main sanctuary.

The magic of these pre-Mass rituals quickly had me feeling like I was floating just above my seat. Soon I was drifting back to my first service ever at Mepkin, when Brother Robert, catching me completely off guard, urgently whispered from his adjacent stall, “The chapel is open all night!” This man, a chapel denizen who sleeps barely three hours a night, was apparently so convinced that this was the answer to my most fervent prayer that all I could do was nod knowingly as if to say “Thank God!”

 

The sound of the rain pelting down on the copper roof of the church on this cold December evening drew me from my reveries, and I noticed with the trace of a smile that I was nervous. I had calmly lectured to large audiences many times, yet I was, as usual, worried that I would somehow screw up the reading that Brother Stan had assigned me for Mass. But reading at Mepkin, especially at Christmas, is such an honor.

 

I felt that my reading came off very well. Returning to my seat I guess I was still excited because, heedless of the breach of etiquette that speaking at Mass implied, I leaned over and asked Brother Boniface for his opinion. Brother Boniface is Mepkin’s 91 year-old statesman, barber, baker and stand up comic. He manages these responsibilities despite a painful arthritis of the spine that has left him doubled over and reduced his walk to an inching shuffle. Swiveling his head on his short bent body in order to make eye contact, Boniface lightly touched my arm with his gnarled fingers and gently whispered through his German accent, “You could’ve been a little slower… and a little louder.”

 

After Mass I noticed that the rain had stopped. I headed for the little Christmas party for monks and guests in the dining hall or refectory. Mepkin is a Trappist or Cistercian monastery, and its official name, “The Order of the Cistercians of the Strict Observance (OCSO),” is taken seriously. Casual talking is actively discouraged and even the vegetarian meals are eaten in strict silence. Parties are decidedly rare and not to be missed.

 

It was a fine affair consisting of light conversation, mutual Christmas wishes, and various Boniface-baked cookies and cakes along with apple cider. Mostly I just basked in the glow of congeniality that I had come to associate so well with Mepkin.

 

I didn’t stay long. It was almost midnight, and after a long day of eight church services, packing eggs, mopping floors, feeding logs into the wood burning furnace, and helping Father Guerric put up Christmas trees, I was asleep on my feet.

 

I said my good-byes and headed for my room several hundred yards away. Halfway to the refectory door I heard the resurgent rain banging on the roof reminding me that I had forgotten to bring an umbrella. Opening the door I was cursing and resigning myself to a miserable hike and a wet monastic guest habit for morning services, when something startled me and left me squinting into the night. As my eyes adjusted, I made out a dim figure standing under an umbrella outlined by the rain and glowing in the light from the still-open door. It was Brother John in a thin monastic habit, his slouched 60 year-old body ignoring the cold.

“Brother John! What are you doing?”

 

“I’m here to walk the people who forgot their umbrellas back to their rooms,” he replied softly.

Flicking on his flashlight we wordlessly started off sharing that single umbrella. For my part I was so stunned by this timely offer that I couldn’t speak. For in a monastery whose Cistercian motto is “prayer and work” and where there are no slackers, no one works harder than Brother John. He rises before three in the morning to make sure coffee is there for everyone, and is still working after most of his brethren have retired.

 

Brother John is also what might be termed Mepkin’s foreman. After morning Mass the monks without regular positions line up in a room off the church for work assignments, and with several thousand acres full of buildings, machinery and a farm with 40,000 chickens there is plenty to do. (As a daily fixture at the grading house packing and stacking eggs thirty dozen to a box, I could easily skip this ritual. I never do. Perhaps it is the way Brother John lights up when I reach the front of the line, touches me ever so lightly on the shoulder and whispers “grading house” that brings me back every morning. Perhaps it is the humility I feel when he thanks me as if I were doing him a personal favor…) Yet Brother John keeps it all in his head. Every light bulb that flickers out somewhere is his responsibility. He supervises when possible and delegates where he can, but as he is always short handed he is constantly jumping in himself at some critical spot. Throughout the monastery the phones ring incessantly with someone on the line asking, “Is John there?” or “Have you seen John?” And through it all, his Irish good humor and gentleness never fades or even frays.

Now after just such a day, four hours after his usual bed time, and forty years into his monastic hitch, here was Brother John eschewing Boniface’s baking, a glass of cider, and a Christmas break in order to walk me back to my room under a shared umbrella.

 

When we reached the church I reassured him several times that I could cut through to my room on the other side before he relented. But as I opened the door of the church something made me turn, and I continued to watch his flashlight as he hurried back for another pilgrim until its glow faded into the night. When I reached my room, I guess I wasn’t as sleepy as I thought. I sat on the edge of my bed in the dark for what I can say with some conviction was a very long time.

* * *

Over the next week I went about my daily routine at Mepkin as usual, but inside I was deeply troubled. I was obsessed with Brother John. On one hand he represented everything I had ever longed for, and on the other all that I had ever feared. I’d read Christian mystics say that God is both terrible and fascinating, and for me Brother John became both.

 

Of course, this had nothing to do with the fact that he was a monk and I was not. On the contrary, Brother John was fascinating precisely because I intuited that to live as he did, to have his quiet peace and effortless love, had nothing to do with being a monk and was available to us all.

But Brother John was also terrible because he was a living breathing witness to my own inadequacies. Like Alkibiades in Plato’s Symposium, speaking of the effect Socrates had on him, I had only to picture Brother John under his umbrella to feel as if “life is not worth living the way I live it.” I was terrified that if I ever did decide to follow the example of Brother John, I would either fail completely or at best be faced with a life of unremitting effort without Brother John’s obvious compensations. I imagined dedicating my life to others, to self-transcendence, without ever finding that inner spark of eternity that so obviously made Brother John’s life the easiest and most natural life I had ever known. Perhaps his peace and effortless love was not available to all but only to some. Perhaps I just didn’t have what it takes.

 

Finally, I asked Father Christian if he could spare a few minutes. Father Christian is Mepkin’s feisty, 88 year-old former abbot, and my irreplaceable spiritual director. Slight and lean, his head is shaven and he wears a bushy chest length beard which he never cuts. When I commented that his beard didn’t seem to be getting any longer, he regretfully said that his beard had stopped growing and added, “While in the popular mind the final length of my beard depends on my longevity, in actuality it depends on my genetics.” Fluent in French and Latin and passable in Greek, he acquired PhDs in Philosophy, Theology, and Canon Law as a Franciscan before entering Mepkin. His learning, his direct yet gentle manner, and his obvious personal spirituality make him an exceptional spiritual director. And while he grouses once in a while about the bottomless demand for this direction I’ve never known him to turn anyone away.

 

I told Father Christian of my experience with Brother John, and I told him that it had left me in an unsettled state. I wanted to elaborate, but he interrupted me. “So you noticed did you? Amazing how many people take something like that for granted in life. John’s a saint you know.”

 

Then seeming to ignore my predicament he launched into a story about a Presbyterian minister having a crisis of faith and leaving the ministry. The man was a friend of his, and Christian took his crisis so seriously that he actually left the monastery and traveled to his house in order to do what he could. The two men spent countless hours in fruitless theological debate. Finally dropping his voice Christian looked the man steadily in the face and said, “Bob, is everything in your life alright?” The minister said everything was fine. But the minister’s wife called Christian a few days later. She had overheard Christian’s question and her husband’s answer, and she told Father Christian that the minister was having an affair and was leaving her as well as his ministry.

 

Christian fairly spat with disgust, “I was wasting my time. Bob’s problem was that he couldn’t take the contradiction between his preaching and his living. So God gets the boot. Remember this, all philosophical problems are at heart moral problems. It all comes down to how you intend to live your life.”

 

We sat silently for a few minutes while Christian cooled off. Maybe he finally took pity on the guy or maybe it was something he saw in my face, but when he spoke the anger in his clear blue eyes had been replaced by a gentle compassion. “You know, you can call it Original Sin, you can call it any darn thing you want to for that matter, but deep down inside every one of us knows something’s twisted. Acknowledging that fact, refusing to run away from it, and deciding to deal with it is the beginning of the only authentic life there is. All evil begins with a lie. The biggest evil comes from the biggest lies, and the biggest lies are the ones we tell ourselves. And we lie to ourselves because we’re afraid to take ourselves on.”

 

Getting up from his chair, he went to a file cabinet in the corner of his office and took out a folded piece of paper. Turning, he handed it to me and said, “I know how you feel. You’re wondering if you have what it takes. Well, God and you both have some work to do, but I’ll say this for you, you’re doing your best to look things square in the face.”

 

As he walked out the door I opened the paper he had given me. There, neatly typed by his ancient manual typewriter on plain white paper, was my name in all caps followed by these words from Pascal.

 

“You would not seek Me if you had not already found Me, and you would not have found Me if I had not first found you.”

 

On close inspection, so much of our indecisiveness concerning life’s purpose is little more than a variation on the minister’s so-called theological doubts. Ultimately it is fear that holds us back, and we avoid this fear through rationalization. We are afraid that if we ever did commit to emulating the Brother Johns of the world that we would merely end up like the Presbyterian minister: pulled apart between the poles of how we are living and how we ought to live and unable to look away. We are afraid that if we ever did venture out we would find ourselves with the worst of both worlds. On one hand we would learn too much about life to return to our comfortable illusions, and on the other we would learn too much about ourselves to hope for success.

However, in our fear we forget the miraculous.

 

This fear of the change we need to make in our lives reminds me of an old friend who, though in his thirties and married for some time, was constantly fighting with his wife over her desire to have a baby. Every time he thought of changing into a father the walls closed in. Fatherhood, he thought, was nothing more than dirty diapers, stacks of bills, sleepless nights, and doting in-laws in every spare bed and couch. Fatherhood meant an end to spontaneous weekends and evenings with the guys. It also meant trading in his sports car for a mini-van and a bigger life insurance policy. It was all so overwhelming.

 

Then one day he gave in. He set his jaw and made the decision to transform himself from a man into a father. He took the chance that he would find himself with all the responsibility of fatherhood and with none of its compensations. Then on another day, his wife handed him his newborn boy.

Unexpectedly an inner alchemy began, and something came over him from a direction he didn’t know existed. He melted and magically the baby gave birth to a father. He was so full of love for this child that he didn’t know what to do with himself. While he once feared losing sleep he began checking his baby so often that the baby lost sleep. He found himself full of boundless gratitude for his re-birth, regret for the fool he was, and compassion for single friends who simply couldn’t understand. He called it a miracle.

 

Similarly we must take a chance and act on faith. We must give in, make the commitment, and be willing to pay the price. We must commit to becoming one with that passive spark of divinity longing for actuality that Thorton Wilder in Our Town describes so well,

 

“Now there are some things we all know but we don’t take’m out and look at’m very often. We all know that something is eternal…everybody knows in their bones that something is eternal and that something has to do with human beings. All the greatest people ever lived have been telling us that for five thousand years and yet you’d be surprised how people are always losing hold of it. There’s something way down deep that’s eternal about every human being.”

 

We must commit to facing our doubts, limitations, and self-contradictions head on while holding on to this voice of eternity. This eternal voice is urging us to take a chance on an unknown outcome in much the same way that nature’s voice urged my friend to take a chance on a new life. And we must fight distraction, futility, rationalization and fatigue at every step.

 

From this side of the chasm we may react with dismay at all the work involved in never again “losing hold of it.” From this side it may be hard to imagine that just as changing a diaper can be magically transformed from drudgery to an effortless privilege so can standing outside in the rain for others. But to experience the magic of this transformation we must put aside these doubts. We must resolve to act decisively while trusting in the aid of something we don’t understand and can never predict. We must open ourselves up to the miraculous, to grace.

 

Working toward this miraculous transformation, re-birth, or inner alchemy is the true purpose of life. This transformation is what the West calls “conversion” and the East “enlightenment,” and is the fruit of our commitment to the authentically purposeful life that Father Christian described so well. It is this transformation that turns work into effortless privilege, makes the unnatural values of Brother John second nature, and proves that the answer to the monk’s last prayer each night at Compline for a “restful night and a peaceful death” is eternally ours. And when we’re ready Brother John will be waiting for us eager to share this miraculous umbrella. Like him we will be utterly grateful for who have become, remorseful for who we were, and compassionate towards those who do not understand.

 

I am not a monk, but I spend enough time at Mepkin Abbey that Father Feliciano introduced me to a visitor recently and followed it with, “He’s always here.” I am often asked why I go. I go because Brother John loves God so much he doesn’t know what to do with himself. He doesn’t know what to do with himself so he stands outside on a cold Christmas night with an umbrella waiting. Waiting to offer us some protection and human comfort on our long journey home.

 

Copyright © 2004 August Turak


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  • This is so inspiring and wonderful. Thanks Peekay. I can almost feel Brother John next to me holding an umbrella over my head, and I have know someone like this and it is such an inspiration. I am now on the long journey home as he said.
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