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BENEDICT XVI
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Saint Peter's Square
Wednesday, 27 May 2009
Saint Theodore the Studite
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The Saint we meet today, St Theodore the Studite, brings us to the middle of
the medieval Byzantine period, in a somewhat turbulent period from the religious
and political perspectives. St Theodore was born in 759 into a devout noble
family: his mother Theoctista and an uncle, Plato, Abbot of the Monastery of
Saccudium in Bithynia, are venerated as saints. Indeed it was his uncle who
guided him towards monastic life, which he embraced at the age of 22. He was
ordained a priest by Patriarch Tarasius, but soon ended his relationship with
him because of the toleration the Patriarch showed in the case of the adulterous
marriage of the Emperor Constantine VI. This led to Theodore's exile in 796 to Thessalonica.
He was reconciled with the imperial authority the following year under the
Empress Irene, whose benevolence induced Theodore and Plato to transfer to the
urban monastery of Studios, together with a large portion of the community of
the monks of Saccudium, in order to avoid the Saracen incursions. So it was that
the important "Studite Reform" began.
Theodore's personal life, however, continued to be eventful. With his usual
energy, he became the leader of the resistance against the iconoclasm of Leo V,
the Armenian who once again opposed the existence of images and icons in the
Church. The procession of icons organized by the monks of Studios evoked a
reaction from the police. Between 815 and 821, Theodore was scourged, imprisoned
and exiled to various places in Asia Minor. In the end he was able to return to
Constantinople but not to his own monastery. He therefore settled with his monks
on the other side of the Bosporus. He is believed to have died in Prinkipo on 11
November 826, the day on which he is commemorated in the Byzantine Calendar.
Theodore distinguished himself within Church history as one of the great
reformers of monastic life and as a defender of the veneration of sacred images,
beside St Nicephorus, Patriarch of Constantinople, in the second phase of the
iconoclasm.
Theodore had realized that the issue of the veneration of icons was calling into
question the truth of the Incarnation itself. In his three books, the
Antirretikoi (Confutations), Theodore makes a comparison between
eternal intra-Trinitarian relations, in which the existence of each of the
divine Persons does not destroy their unity, and the relations between Christ's
two natures, which do not jeopardize in him the one Person of the Logos.
He also argues: abolishing veneration of the icon of Christ would mean
repudiating his redeeming work, given that, in assuming human nature, the
invisible eternal Word appeared in visible human flesh and in so doing
sanctified the entire visible cosmos.
Theodore and his monks, courageous witnesses in the period of the
iconoclastic persecutions, were inseparably bound to the reform of coenobitic
life in the Byzantine world. Their importance was notable
if only for an external circumstance: their number. Whereas the number of monks
in monasteries of that time did not exceed 30 or 40, we know from the Life of
Theodore of the existence of more than 1,000 Studite monks overall. Theodore
himself tells us of the presence in his monastery of about 300 monks; thus we
see the enthusiasm of faith that was born within the context of this man's being
truly informed and formed by faith itself. However, more influential than these
numbers was the new spirit the Founder impressed on coenobitic life. In his
writings, he insists on the urgent need for a conscious return to the teaching
of the Fathers, especially to St Basil, the first legislator of monastic life,
and to St Dorotheus of Gaza, a famous spiritual Father of the Palestinian desert.
Theodore's characteristic contribution consists in insistence on the need for
order and submission on the monks' part. During the persecutions they had
scattered and each one had grown accustomed to living according to his own
judgement. Then, as it was possible to re-establish community life, it was
necessary to do the utmost to make the monastery once again an organic
community, a true family, or, as St Theodore said, a true "Body of Christ". In
such a community the reality of the Church as a whole is realized concretely.
Another of St Theodore's basic convictions was this: monks, differently from
lay people, take on the commitment to observe the Christian duties with greater
strictness and intensity. For this reason they make a special profession which
belongs to the hagiasmata (consecrations), and it is, as it were,
a "new Baptism", symbolized by their taking the habit. Characteristic of monks
in comparison with lay people, then, is the commitment to poverty, chastity and
obedience. In addressing his monks, Theodore spoke in a practical, at times
picturesque manner about poverty, but poverty in the following of Christ is from
the start an essential element of monasticism and also points out a way for all
of us. The renunciation of private property, this freedom from material things,
as well as moderation and simplicity apply in a radical form only to monks, but
the spirit of this renouncement is equal for all. Indeed, we must not depend on
material possessions but instead must learn renunciation, simplicity, austerity
and moderation. Only in this way can a supportive society develop and the great
problem of poverty in this world be overcome. Therefore, in this regard the
monks' radical poverty is essentially also a path for us all. Then when he
explains the temptations against chastity, Theodore does not conceal his own
experience and indicates the way of inner combat to find self control and hence
respect for one's own body and for the body of the other as a temple of God.
However, the most important renunciations in his opinion are those required
by obedience, because each one of the monks has his own way of living, and
fitting into the large community of 300 monks truly involves a new way of life
which he describes as the "martyrdom of submission". Here too the monks' example
serves to show us how necessary this is for us, because, after the original sin,
man has tended to do what he likes. The first principle is for the life of the
world, all the rest must be subjected to it. However, in this way, if each
person is self-centred, the social structure cannot function. Only by learning
to fit into the common freedom, to share and to submit to it, learning legality,
that is, submission and obedience to the rules of the common good and life in
common, can society be healed, as well as the self, of the pride of being
the centre of the world. Thus St Theodore, with fine introspection, helped his
monks and ultimately also helps us to understand true life, to resist the
temptation to set up our own will as the supreme rule of life and to preserve
our true personal identity which is always an identity shared with others and
peace of heart.
For Theodore the Studite an important virtue on a par with obedience and
humility is philergia, that is, the love of work, in which he sees a
criterion by which to judge the quality of personal devotion: the person who is
fervent and works hard in material concerns, he argues, will be the same in
those of the spirit. Therefore he does not permit the monk to dispense with
work, including manual work, under the pretext of prayer and contemplation; for
work to his mind and in the whole monastic tradition is actually a means of
finding God. Theodore is not afraid to speak of work as the "sacrifice of the
monk", as his "liturgy", even as a sort of Mass through which monastic life
becomes angelic life. And it is precisely in this way that the world of work
must be humanized and man, through work, becomes more himself and closer to God.
One consequence of this unusual vision is worth remembering: precisely because
it is the fruit of a form of "liturgy", the riches obtained from common work
must not serve for the monks' comfort but must be earmarked for assistance to
the poor. Here we can all understand the need for the proceeds of work to be a
good for all. Obviously the "Studites'" work was not only manual: they had
great importance in the religious and cultural development of the Byzantine
civilization as calligraphers, painters, poets, educators of youth, school
teachers and librarians.
Although he exercised external activities on a truly vast scale, Theodore did
not let himself be distracted from what he considered closely relevant to his
role as superior: being the spiritual father of his monks. He knew what a
crucial influence both his good mother and his holy uncle Plato whom he
described with the significant title "father" had had on his life. Thus he
himself provided spiritual direction for the monks. Every day, his biographer
says, after evening prayer he would place himself in front of the iconostasis to
listen to the confidences of all. He also gave spiritual advice to many people
outside the monastery. The Spiritual Testament and the Letters
highlight his open and affectionate character, and show that true spiritual
friendships were born from his fatherhood both in the monastic context and
outside it.
The Rule, known by the name of Hypotyposis, codified shortly
after Theodore's death, was adopted, with a few modifications, on Mount Athos
when in 962 St Athanasius Anthonite founded the Great Laura there, and in the
Kievan Rus', when at the beginning of the second millennium St Theodosius
introduced it into the Laura of the Grottos. Understood in its genuine meaning,
the Rule has proven to be unusually up to date. Numerous trends today
threaten the unity of the common faith and impel people towards a sort of
dangerous spiritual individualism and spiritual pride. It is necessary to strive
to defend and to increase the perfect unity of the Body of Christ, in which the
peace of order and sincere personal relations in the Spirit can be harmoniously
composed.
It may be useful to return at the end to some of the main elements of
Theodore's spiritual doctrine: love for the Lord incarnate and for his
visibility in the Liturgy and in icons; fidelity to Baptism and the commitment
to live in communion with the Body of Christ, also understood as the communion
of Christians with each other; a spirit of poverty, moderation and renunciation;
chastity, self-control, humility and obedience against the primacy of one's own
will that destroys the social fabric and the peace of souls; love for physical
and spiritual work; spiritual love born from the purification of one's own
conscience, one's own soul, one's own life. Let us seek to comply with these
teachings that really do show us the path of true life.
To special groups
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I warmly greet all the English-speaking pilgrims. In a special way, I welcome
members of the Schola Cantorum of Assumption Seminary in San Antonio,
Texas; seminarians and priests from Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit,
Michigan; and members of the Order of Knights of Saint John from Nigeria. God
bless all of you!
* * *
Lastly, I address my greeting to the young people, the
sick and the newly weds. Yesterday the Church commemorated St Philip
Neri who was distinguished by his cheerfulness and his dedication to the poor
and the sick, and especially to young people. Dear young people, learn
from this Saint to live your life with evangelical simplicity and joy. Dear
sick people, may St Philip Neri help you to make your suffering an offering
to the heavenly Father in union with the Crucified Jesus. And may you, dear
newlyweds, supported by his intercession, build families illuminated by
evangelical wisdom.
© Copyright 2009 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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