Listen
to the Gothic Voices
sing Deus Creator Omnium.
Music Details HERE.
HAVING recognized and worshipped
the Name,
we pray next for its triumph:
Thy Kingdom come.
Here man's most sacred birthright,
his deep longing for perfection,
and with it his bitter consciousness of imperfection,
break out with power.
We want to bring the God whom we worship,
His beauty, His sovereignty, His order,
into the very texture of our life;
and the fundamental human need for action into the radius of our prayer.
This is the natural sequel to the prayer of adoration.
We have had a glimpse of the mystery of the Holy,
have worshipped before the veils of beauty and sacrifice;
and that throws into vivid relief
the poverty, the anarchy, the unreality in which we live—
the resistance of the world, the creature to God,
and its awful need of God.
Thy Kingdom come!
We open our gates to the Perfect, and entreat its transfiguring presence;
redeeming our poor contingencies, our disharmonies,
making good our perpetual fallings short.
We face the awful contrast between the Actual and the Real,
and acknowledge our need of deliverance from sin;
especially that sin of the world,
that rebellion of creation against the Holy,
which has thrust us out of heaven.
The Kingdom is the serenity of God already enfolding us,
and seeking to penetrate and redeem the whole of this created order;
"shattering the horror of perpetual night"
by a ray of heavenly brightness.
We pray for this transformation of life,
this healing of its misery and violence,
its confusion and unrest,
through the coming of the Holy God whom we adore;
carrying through to regions still unconquered
the great, the primary petition for the hallowing of His Name.
That the Splendour over against us
may enter, cleanse and sanctify every level of our existence;
give it a new quality, coherence and meaning.
The prayer is not that we may come into the Kingdom,
for this we cannot do in our own strength.
It is that the Kingdom,
the Wholly Other,
may come to us, and become operative within our order;
one thing working in another,
as leaven in our dough, as seed in our field.
We are not encouraged to hope that the social order will go on evolving from
within,
until at last altruism triumphs and greed is dethroned:
nor indeed does history support this view.
So far is this amiable programme from the desperate realities of our situation,
so unlikely is it that human nature will ever do the work of grace,
that now we entreat the Divine Power to enter history by His Spirit and by
His saints;
to redeem, cleanse, fertilize and rule.
Nor is this tremendous desire,
this direct appeal to the Transcendent,
that of one or two ardent and illuminated souls:
it is to be the constant prayer of the whole Church,
voicing the one need of the whole world.
We know that the whole creation
groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now.
And not only so, but ourselves also,
which have the first fruits of the Spirit.
[1 Romans viii, 22, 23. 29]
Listen
to King's college choir sing Ralph Vaughn Williams' Kyrie. Music
Details HERE.
The world is not saved by evolution,
but by incarnation.
The more deeply we enter into prayer
the more certain we become of this.
Nothing can redeem the lower and bring it back to health,
but a life-giving incursion from the higher;
a manifestation of the already present Reality.
I came forth from the Father,
and am come into the world:
and this perpetual advent—
the response of the eternal Agape to Eros in his need—
is the true coming into time of the Kingdom of Heaven.
The Pentecostal energy and splendour is present
to glorify every living thing:
and sometimes
our love reaches the level at which it sees this as a present fact,
and the actual is transfigured by the real.
Listen
to the Tallis Scholars sing the Te Deum from Byrd's three-part Mass. Music
Details HERE.
What we look for then is not Utopia,
but something that is given from beyond:
Emmanuel, God with us,
the whole creation won from rebellion
and consecrated to the creative purposes of Christ.
This means something
far more drastic than the triumph of international justice
and good social conditions.
It means the transfiguration of the natural order by the supernatural:
by the Eternal Charity.
Though we achieve social justice, liberty, peace itself,
though we give our bodies to be burned for these admirable causes,
if we lack this we are nothing.
For the Kingdom is the Holy not the moral;
the Beautiful not the correct;
the Perfect not the adequate;
Charity not law.
With our growth in the spiritual life,
we gradually learn this lesson of the complete difference in kind between our
kingdom,
our aim and achievement even at its best,
and the Kingdom and achievement of God:
that even the most devoted efforts for the moral and spiritual improvement
of the here-and-now stop short of the real need—
that total redemption of a distorted world for which
the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth;
its re-harmonizing with reality.
The rule of Charity,
which is the same as the sovereignty of the Holy,
can never be forced on a reluctant world;
for this is not consistent with its nature.
God will not invade His lost province.
His Spirit conquers by penetration,
entering by the open door of prayer
and spreading to entincture the whole of life.
Our God shall come and shall not keep silence;
but the coming will be very quiet.
Without observation,
the Eternal slides into the successive by inconspicuous paths,
and transforms it to its purpose;
the humble birth in a crowded stable-yard outside Jerusalem,
the victory of love
when a young prophet gave himself to the Father's purpose on the Cross,
when a young scholar capitulated to that same Cross on the road to Damascus,
when a young poet kissed a leper outside the gates of Assisi.
And many times more when homely heroisms,
quiet sacrifices,
secret prayers have opened the door.
For the action of God is seldom showy;
the true energies of the Kingdom are super-sensuous—
only a little filters through to the visible world.
Thus more and more
we must expect our small action to be overruled
and swallowed up in the vast Divine action;
and be ready to offer it, whatever it may be,
for the fulfilment of God's purpose,
however much this may differ from our purpose.
The Christian turns again and again from that bewildered contemplation of history
in which God is so easily lost,
to the prayer of filial trust in which He is always found;
knowing here that those very things which seem to turn to man's disadvantage,
may yet work to the Divine advantage.
On the frontier between prayer and history stands the Cross,
a perpetual reminder of the price by which the Kingdom is brought in.
Seen from the world's side it is foolishness;
seen from the land of contemplation,
it is the Wisdom of God.
We live in illusion till that wisdom has touched us;
and this touch is the first coming of the Kingdom to the individual soul.
It is a great thing for any soul to say without reserve in respect of its own life,
Thy Kingdom come!
for this means not only the acknowledgment of our present alienation,
our fundamental egoism and impurity,
but the casting down of the will,
the destruction of our small natural sovereignty;
the risk and adventure
which accompany an unconditional submission to God,
a total acceptance of the rule of love.
None can guess beforehand with what anguish,
what tearing of old hard tissues and habits,
the Kingdom will force a path into the soul,
and confront self-love in its last fortress
with the penetrating demand of God.
Yet we cannot use the words,
unless we are prepared to pay this price:
nor is the prayer of adoration real, unless it leads on to this.
When we said,
Hallowed be Thy Name!
we acknowledged the priority of Holiness.
Now we offer ourselves for the purposes of Holiness:
handing ourselves over to God
that His purposes,
great or small,
declared or secret,
natural or spiritual,
may be fulfilled through us and in us,
and all that is hostile to His Kingdom done away.
There will be two sides to this: passive and active.
The passive side means enduring, indeed welcoming,
the inexorable pressure of God's transforming power in our own lives;
for the Kingdom comes upon earth bit by bit,
as first one soul and then another is subjugated by love and so redeemed.
It means enduring the burning glance of the Holy,
where that glance falls on imperfection, hardness, sin.
The active side means a self-offering for the purposes of the Kingdom,
here and now in this visible world of space and time;
the whole drive of our life, all our natural endowments,
set towards a furtherance of the purposes of God.
Those purposes will not be fulfilled
till the twist has been taken out of experience,
and everything on earth conforms to the pattern in heaven—
that is to say, in the Mind of God:
wide-spreading love transfiguring the whole texture of life.
Here we have a direct responsibility as regards our whole use of created things:
money, time, position, the politics we support, the papers we read.
It is true that the most drastic social reform,
the most complete dethronement of privilege,
cannot of themselves bring the Kingdom in;
for peace and joy in the Holy Spirit can only come to us by the free gift of
the Transcendent.
But at least these can clear the ground,
prepare the highway of God;
and here each act of love,
each sacrifice,
each conquest of prejudice,
each generous impulse carried through into action counts:
and each unloving gesture, hard judgment,
pessimistic thought or utterance
opposes the coming of the Kingdom
and falsifies the life of prayer.
The Coming of the Kingdom is perpetual.
Again and again freshness, novelty, power from beyond the world,
break in by unexpected paths, bringing unexpected change.
Those who cling to tradition
and fear all novelty in God's relation with His world
deny the creative activity of the Holy Spirit,
and forget that what is now tradition was once innovation:
that the real Christian is always a revolutionary,
belongs to a new race,
and has been given a new name and a new song.
God is with the future.
The supernatural virtue of hope
blesses and supports every experiment made for the glory of His Name and the
good of souls:
and even when violence and horror seem about to overwhelm us,
discerns the secret movement of the Spirit inciting to sacrifice and preparing
new triumphs for the Will.
In the Church too this process of renovation from within,
this fresh invasion of Reality must constantly be repeated if she is to escape
the ever-present danger of stagnation.
She is not a static institution,
but the living Body of the living Christ—
the nucleus of the Kingdom in this world.
Thus loyalty to her supernatural calling
will mean flexibility to its pressures and demands,
and also a constant adjustment to that changing world
to which she brings the unchanging gifts.
But only in so far as her life is based on prayer and self-offering
will she distinguish rightly between these implicits of her vocation
and the suggestions of impatience or self-will.
Yet the coming of the Kingdom does not necessarily mean the triumph of this
visible Church;
nor of that which is sometimes called the Christian social order.
It means something far more deep, subtle and costly:
the reign of God,
the all-demanding and all-loving, in individual hearts,
over-ruling all the "adverse powers" which dominate human life—
the vigorous survivals from our animal past which are nourished by egotism
and support its implicit rebellion against God —
fear and anger,
greed and self-assertion,
jealousy, impatience and discontent.
It means the re-ordering,
the quieting,
the perfecting of our turbulent interior life,
the conquest of our rampant individualism by God's supernatural action;
and that same supernatural action
gradually making each human life what it is meant to be—
a living part of the Body of Christ,
a sacramental disclosure of the splendour of God.
This secret and unrepeatable relation of each soul with God in prayer
is the true condition of the well-being of the Church;
for it is through these individual and derivative spirits that Holy and Absolute
Spirit works in time.
If the individual Christian depends on the support of the Supernatural Society,
no less does that Supernatural Society depend on the quality of the individual
Christian;
and this quality is conditioned by his prayer—
that is, the faithfulness, humility and self-oblivion
with which he responds to the pressure of God
and offers himself for the purposes of the Will.
To look with real desire for the coming of the Kingdom
means crossing over to God's side;
dedicating our powers, whatever they may be,
to the triumph of His purpose.
The Bible is full of a stern insistence on that action which is ever the corollary
of true contemplation.
It is here that the praying spirit accepts its most sacred privilege:
active and costly co-operation with God—
first in respect of its own purification,
and then in respect of His creative and redeeming action upon life.
Our attitude here must be wide open towards God,
exhibiting quite simply our poverty and impurity,
acknowledging our second-rateness,
but still offering ourselves such as we are.
Thy Kingdom come!
Here am I, send me.
Not the nature-lover's admiration
but the labourer's hard work
turns the cornfield into the harvest-field.
Hard work, which soon loses the aura of romantic devotion;
and must be continued through drudgery and exhaustion to the end.
When we realize this, and volunteer for it,
at once we have about us the tremendous energies of the Saints;
the great co-operators with the Holy,
the delighted slaves of God at their infinitely varied tasks —
yet all in one way or another proclaiming the imminent Kingdom,
bringing the Eternal Charity into immediate contact with the creature's
imperfections and needs.
If we consider Christ's own action,
as he moves, a man amongst men,
declaring the Kingdom of God,
we see that He sets about this in the most practical way:
not merely inviting men to think of the Transcendent,
but bringing down into the texture of their lives
the redeeming action of the Transcendent.
He is singularly uninterested in lofty ideas and large projects,
but greatly interested in redemptive acts.
Jesus,
says St. Matthew,
went about in all Galilee,
preaching the good news of the Kingdom
and healing all manner of disease
and all manner of sickness among the people.
He was acting as the link between the outpouring love and harmony of the Life
of God,
and the jangled and defective life of men.
Tell John
the blind see,
the lame walk,
the lepers are cleansed.
Human life is readjusted and made whole by the healing action of dynamic love,
exercised by One whose life is identical with His prayer.
His injunctions to His agents follow the same lines.
They are to heal disharmony and misery wherever they find it;
meeting with an eager and compassionate love the most repulsive aspects of
life,
touching the leper,
ministering to the neurotic,
seeking the degraded and the lost.
Listen
to the Coventry cathedral choir sing the hymn, ‘Lo He comes.' Music
Details HERE.
Christ announced the one and only purpose of His ministry to be the bringing
in of the Kingdom of God;
by the quiet action of a flawless love giving back to our lost tormented planet
its place in the orchestra of heaven.
Yet the way in which He spoke of this Kingdom,
this victory of the Supernatural,
was always allusive, suggestive, poetic—
never precise.
The Mystery of the Kingdom is sacred and must be reverenced.
Again and again we are warned against any attempt to reduce it to a formula,
to say, “Lo here! lo there!”, to be dogmatic.
Instead of definition we are given a series of vivid contrasting pictures of
some of the things that it is like:
oblique approaches to a single living Truth.
Its inconspicuousness from our point of view and yet its tremendous latent
energy—
like seed which has in itself the whole life of the tree:
like leaven working unseen the transformation of the dough.
Its overwhelming attraction for those who recognize it —
the Pearl, the Treasure.
The Saints selling all they have to buy that Pearl,
abandoning everything for the field in which the Treasure is hid:
prudence obliterated by love.
In telling of the Kingdom,
He begins with the homely facts of daily life,
but ends upon the summit of romance.
The Pearl is like the Grail:
something always here, but never actualized
save in the experience of certain happy and single-minded souls.
Useless to hunt for it.
We light upon it suddenly,
in its matchless and reticent beauty:
then, all hinges upon whether we will sell everything and pay the price.
Again, the Kingdom is present already,
mingling disguised with the untransformed and common life;
and sometimes the form in which it meets us has no beauty
that we should desire it.
Then it must be recognized
not by its looks
but by its fruits.
It enters the world that we know, as it were
by the action of One who sows broadcast
something which is not of the world we know—
the good seed of Holiness, the supernatural life.
Sows it, not in a nicely prepared corner,
but in the open field,
exposed to all weathers and all risks.
There God's wheat and the devil's darnel,
which looks at first glance just like wheat,
grow together.
Real charity and sham charity;
the real Christian and the self-occupied devotee.
The hurried enthusiast,
the keen reformer,
eager to apply absolute standards,
wants to pull up the darnel and leave the wheat.
But the wise tolerance of God leaves both growing together;
content that the genuine crop should be known by its yield.
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