Walked past a media-celebrity SJ at the inexpensive gym. Shot him a quick Christos Anesti! in passing. Polite smile in return. American SJs can be peculiar. Sometimes one wonders if the John Foster / Avery Cardinal line is as bright as it should be. But it all works for the greater glory. Insh'allah.
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Continuing with the morning Mass at the cathedral, with the exception of laundry days (when I head to the parish). It is an exercise of will, admittedly. And to some degree agnostic as to creed and faith -- a Japanese cleric of an indigenous faith might do precisely the same, for precisely the same reasons. You do have to have the right disposition -- with the daily amplified repetition of precisely the same words, it is almost like the regular rhythmic bells of a meditation exercise, while at the same time you are focusing on the origin of the words in time and their present truth. Or, you know, simply repeating the same words over and over for the comfort of today's similarity to yesterday, as a child might listen to precisely the same audiotape day after day. (The last sentence should be read with some irony.) Kierkegaard on repetition and irony should perhaps be on the liturgists' agenda. Consider the phenomenology of the event, given that it has been newly instituted -- less than a century ago.
So there's the mental discipline of will, and there's also the hope for the extraordinary, something to break through the dull fog of the day. A philosophical insight into one of the texts read by rote in anodyne translation. A locution at the altar of the Blessed Virgin. (Difficult to authenticate in real time. Like wondering if the telegraph signal is coming from the Celestial City, or someone tapping into the line. Piecing out the truth from the party line. And not always at the altar--sometimes when sipping kefir and reading philosophy above a supermarket in Bosnia.) But these are all prefigured hopes, and the point of sacred ritual is that it is originary, and for this you need self-possession.
When I attended the 7AM at the cathedral (usually the Abp's mass in years past), I would go through the liturgy of the hours beforehand on the steps, and after that, and before the mass, I would imagine the place a century or two ago, the small SJ college, seminarians in the small building focusing their minds on the same things that I would be spending the day reading at the research libraries later that day. Otherwise, St. Pat's is a bit of a Disneyland for the tourists.
And it is tied to the book. I would usually stop during my morning run in front of the old medieval Hungarian church in Cluj, on the ab oriento centerline, and think about the book inside. And the importance of those ideas, and the way that the stone rose around them. One morning, a stream of SJ seminarians (still in predawn darkness) streamed out of a service through the front door. I was a good distance from the door, so what followed was genuinely peculiar. As I stood there meditating, they walked towards me seriatum, some going to my right, some going to my left. Partly perhaps the Balkan notions of personal space. But it is important to know the things that draw you to the place, the originary function of the place, and that which issues from the event.
Many mansions. The great societies and orders have their cruise ships (or perhaps convertible merchant marine ships like those before the two big wars of the last century), and I have my canoe. The general proposition is that all men are kings and priests in this country, and perhaps that's the issue being tried in the changes of the present hour.